Abstract
This chapter highlights how developments in political economics contribute to the understanding of macroeconomic policy and, more specifically, of the timing, design, and likelihood of success of stabilizations achieved through monetary and fiscal reforms. It discusses the role of rationality in political-economic models and related methodological issues. The chapter addresses the timing of macroeconomic policy in general, and of fiscal reforms in particular, in relation to the timing of elections. It focuses on how ideological and opportunistic considerations influence the choice of when to implement certain policies. The chapter examines the related issue of why stabilizations are delayed and reviews the theory and empirical evidence of political cycles in economic policymaking. It emphasizes why suboptimal economic outcomes such as hyperinflation and out-of-control budget deficits are not corrected for extended periods of time. The chapter also emphasizes which political-institutional features are most likely to produce the timely adoption of successful stabilization programs.
Keywords
Related Publications
What Washington Means by Policy Reform
This chapter aims to set out what would be regarded in Washington as constituting a desirable set of economic policy reforms. It identifies and discusses ten policy instruments ...
Central Bank Independence and Macroeconomic Performance: Some Comparative Evidence
This note uses information on a sample of sixteen OECD countries to assess the relationship between central bank independence and macroeconomic performance. As previous work sug...
Modeling U.S. Budgetary and Fiscal Policy Outcomes: A Disaggregated, Systemwide Perspective
This paper develops and estimates a model of U.S. federal budgetary outcomes that allows for considerable disaggregation across spending categories while providing, through cros...
Determinants of Current Account Deficits in Developing Countries
July 2000 - In developing countries, increases in current account deficits tend to be associated with a rise in domestic output growth and shocks that increase the terms of trad...
Democracy and the Market
From the instrumental point of view, the key to liberal democracy is some system of voting. Democracy and electoral competition are regarded as virtually synonymous, with interp...
Publication Info
- Year
- 2018
- Type
- book-chapter
- Pages
- 44-58
- Citations
- 33
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.4324/9780429498893-9