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The industrial organization of Congress (Weingast-Marshall)

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The industrial organization of Congress (Weingast-Marshall) The organization of Congress meets remarkably well the electoral needs of its members.(..) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The industrial organization of Congress (Weingast-Marshall)


1
The industrial organization of Congress
(Weingast-Marshall)
  • The organization of Congress meets remarkably
    well the electoral needs of its members.(..) If a
    group of planners sat down and tried to design a
    pair of American national assemblies with the
    goal of serving members electoral needs year in
    and year out they would be hard pressed to
    improve on what exists. (David Mayhew )

2
The industrial organization of Congress
  • A huge variety of interests are represented in
    the legislature and almost none is represented by
    a majority
  • The diversity of interests creates gains from
    exchange
  • If public policies reflect a series of bargains
    among various interests, how are these bargains
    maintained over time ?

3
Transaction costs
  • 2 problems
  • Imperfect observability
  • Incompleteness of contracts (moral hazard problem)

4
Three assumptions
5
Vote trading (or logrolling) models, Tullock 1981
6
Not only porkbarrel politics
  • Pork Barrel programs (distributive policies)
    benefit flows are contemporaneous to different
    legislators Usual legislative instrument to
    prevent future reneging omnibus bill
  • However many programs imply
  • Noncontemporaneous benefit flows
  • Nonsimultaneous exchange

7
Repeat play and reputation useful but not always
sufficient
8
An idealized legislative committee system
Gatekeeping power
9
An idealized legislative committee system
10
Consequences of the idealized legislative
committee system on trade enforcement
  • One group of legislators seeks dams and bridges
    another wants regulatory benefits.
  • The 2 groups now are in two different committees.
  • The control over the agenda within its
    jurisdiction implies that a committee has a veto
    power over the proposal of others
  • Ex post reneging is not possible anymore

11
Consequences of the idealized legislative
committee system on the type of policies and the
identity of the gainers
12
Consequences of the idealized legislative
committee system on the type of coalitions
  • Successful coalitions must include the members of
    the relevant committee
  • Policy and coalitions are more durable small
    electoral shifts do not matter

13
Summary
14
Why Parties? (Aldrich)
  • There is a set of incentives for ambitious
    politicians to turn to parties. They can solve
    efficiently difficult problems
  • Collective action (social choice)problems in
    policy making
  • Collective action (public goods) problems in
    elections

15
Why Parties? (Aldrich)Collective Action problems
(social choice type)
Bill (voted against the Status Quo) Bill (voted against the Status Quo) Bill (voted against the Status Quo)
Legislator X Y Z
A 4 3 -9
B 3 -9 4
C -9 4 3
  • Independent Voting Outcome All bills pass Payoff
    (-2A , -2B , -2C)
  • Pareto optimal result Defeat all bills Payoff
    (0, 0, 0)
  • Party of A and B Outcome Pass only X Payoff
    (4,3,-9)

16
Why Parties? (Aldrich)Collective Action problems
(public good type)
Players 2 Choice Players 2 Choice
Players 1 Choice Cooperation Defection
Cooperation (3,3) (1,4)
Defection (4,1) (2,2)
Nash Equilibrium, Pareto inferior
17
Collective Action problems with Universalism
(pork barrel projects)
Bill(voted against the Status Quo) Bill(voted against the Status Quo) Bill(voted against the Status Quo)
Legislator X Y Z
A 3 -1 -1
B -1 3 -1
C -1 -1 3
  • Independent Voting Outcome All bills fail Payoff
    (0A , 0B , 0C)
  • Pareto optimal result Pass all bills Payoff
    (1, 1, 1)
  • Universalism norm Pass all bills Payoff (1,
    1, 1)
  • Expected utility of minimal voting coalition
    (Weingast 1979) Payoff (2/3,2/3,2/3) Each mvc
    member receives 2, Each non mvc member receives
    -2 probability to be mvc member 2/3
    Exp.utility (2/3)(2) (1/3)(-2)2/3
  • Party of A and B Outcome Pass bills X and Y
    Payoff (2,2,-2)

18
Convenience to form a party even without
collective action problems (pork barrel projects)
Bill(voted against the Status Quo) Bill(voted against the Status Quo) Bill(voted against the Status Quo)
Legislator X Y Z
A 2 -1 -1
B -1 2 -1
C -1 -1 2
  • Independent Voting Outcome All bills fail Payoff
    (0A , 0B , 0C)
  • Pareto optimal result Pass all bills Payoff
    (0A , 0B , 0C)
  • Universalism norm Pass all bills Payoff (0A ,
    0B , 0C)
  • Expected utility of minimal voting coalition
    (Weingast 1979) Payoff (0,0,0) Each mvc member
    receives 1, Each non mvc member receives -2
    probability to be mvc member 2/3 Exp.utility
    (2/3)(1) (1/3)(-2)0
  • Party of A and B Outcome Pass bills X and Y
    Payoff (1,1,-2)

19
Pork Barrel, Universalism and Party Formation
  • n legislators mminimal majority size
  • b benefit to pass a bill for the winner
  • Cgeneral cost of the bill
  • cC/n individual cost (for the legislator, namely
    the costituency)
  • Any legislator in choosing independently will
    vote for any bill for which b-cgt0
  • However in order to approve his/her bill a
    legislator need to find a majority in other
    terms he/she has to pay the cost of other
    bills..
  • A series of pork barrel bills will pass if b
    mc gt0 for all members of a minimum winning
    coalition in other terms if the benefit to
    approve his/her project overcomes the cost to
    approve the bills of the other coalition members.

20
Pork Barrel, Universalism and Party Formation
  • However the benefit b can really take place only
    if the MP is member of the winning coalition.
  • p a priori probability to be member of a minimum
    winning coalition
  • If all minimum winning coalitions are equally
    likely then each MPs expects to receive
    p(b-mc)(1-p)(-mc)pb-mc
  • The critical problem here is the uncertainty.
    Binding unanimous coalition that cancels the
    uncertainty (universalism) can be a better
    institutional solution (condition b-ncgtpb-mc)
  • Forming a party is even more convenient.
  • (condition b-mcgtpb-mc always true)

21
Social Choice problems (one bill against another)
Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills
Legislator First Second Third
A X Y Z
B Z X Y
C Y Z X
Utility Value 4 3 -9
  • Round-robin tournament Y beats Z (A,C) Z beats
    X(B,C) X beats Y (A,B) ??
  • Sequential agendasincere voting

First step Final step Payoff to (A,B,C)
(X,Y)X (X,Z)Z (-9,4,3)
(X,Z)Z (Z,Y)Y (3,-9,4)
(Y,Z)Y (Y,X)X (4,3,-9)
22
Social Choice problems (one bill against another)
Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills
Legislator First Second Third
A X Y Z
B Z X Y
C Y Z X
Utility Value 4 3 -9
  • Round-robin tournament Y beats Z (A,C) Z beats
    X(B,C) X beats Y (A,B) ??
  • Sequential agenda sophisticated voting

First step Final step Payoff to (A,B,C)
(X,Y)Y (Y,Z)Y (3,-9,4)
(X,Z)X (X,Y)X (4,3,-9)
(Y,Z)Z (Z,X)Z (-9,4,3)
23
Social Choice problems (one bill against another)
Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills
Legislator First Second Third
A X Y Z
B Z X Y
C Y Z X
Utility Value 4 3 -9
  • Round-robin tournament Y beats Z (A,C) Z beats
    X(B,C) X beats Y (A,B) ??
  • Equiprobable order of voting Expected outcome
    (-2/3, -2/3, -2/3)
  • Temporary coalitions cycle.
  • Party of A and B Outcome Pass X. Payoff (4,3,-9)

24
Absence of a Social Choice problem
Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills
Legislator First Second Third
A X Y Z
B Z X Y
C Y X Z
Utility Value 4 3 -9
  • Round-robin tournament X beats Y (A,B) ,Y beats
    Z (A,C) X beats Z (A,C)Outcome X
  • Sequential agenda sincere voting

First step Final step Payoff to (A,B,C)
(X,Y)X (X,Z)X (4,3,3)
(X,Z)X (Z,Y)X (4,3,3)
(Y,Z)Y (Y,X)X (4,3,3)
25
Absence of a Social Choice problem
Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills
Legislator First Second Third
A X Y Z
B Z X Y
C Y X Z
Utility Value 4 3 -9
  • Round-robin tournament X beats Y (A,B) ,Y beats
    Z (A,C) X beats Z (A,C)Outcome X
  • Sequential agenda sophisticated voting

First step Final step Payoff to (A,B,C)
(X,Y)X (X,Z)X (4,3,3)
(X,Z)X (Z,Y)X (4,3,3)
(Y,Z)Y (Y,X)X (4,3,3)
26
Social Choice problems (only one bill to approve)
Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills Preference ranking on bills
Legislator First Second Third
A X Y Z
B Z X Y
C Y X Z
Utility Value 4 3 -9
  • Round-robin tournament X beats Y (A,B) ,Y beats
    Z (A,C) X beats Z (A,C)Outcome X
  • Equiprobable order of voting All pass X. Payoff
    (4,3,3)
  • Temporary coalitions (A,B),(B,C), (A,C) pass X.
    Payoff (4,3,3)
  • Party of A and B Outcome Pass X. Payoff (4,3,3)
  • No incentive for party formation!!

27
Collective action and electoral mobilization
  • Two problems
  • The calculus of voting RPBD-C Pprobability
    that the vote affects the outcome Bthe
    differential benefit from the election of the
    preferred candidate D the duty as citizen. P is
    usually very small.
  • Becoming informed

28
Incentive for Party Affiliation for candidates
  • Affiliation provides the candidate of a brand
    name, useful to convey in a cheap way information
  • Affiliation provides economies of scale for the
    party campaign efforts.
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