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How a firm can induce legislators to adopt a bad policy

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-10-09, 15:17 authored by M Dahm, R Dur, A Glazer
This paper shows why a majority of legislators may vote for a policy that benefits a firm but harms all legislators. The firm may induce legislators to support the policy by suggesting that it is more likely to invest in a district where voters or their representative support the policy. In equilibrium, no one vote may be decisive, so each legislator who seeks the firm’s investment votes for the policy, though all legislators would be better off if they all voted against the policy. And when votes reveal information about the district, the firm’s implicit promise or threat can be credible. Unlike influence mechanisms based on contributions or bribes, the behavior considered is time consistent and in line with the low campaign contributions by special interests.

Funding

Government of Catalonia, and of the Government of Spain under projects SEJ2007-67580-C02-01 and ECO2010-19733.

History

Citation

Public Choice, 2014, 159 (1-2), pp. 63-82

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of Business

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Public Choice

Publisher

Springer Nature

issn

0048-5829

eissn

1573-7101

Acceptance date

2012-08-17

Copyright date

2012

Available date

2019-10-09

Language

en

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