Discussion paper

DP7910 Communication in Federal Politics: Universalism, Policy Uniformity, and the Optimal Allocation of Fiscal Authority

The paper presents a positive model of communication in federal legislatures to study the incentives of members to engage in a meaningful exchange of information, and how this shapes policy outcomes. Depending on the type of policy under consideration, communication between delegates generally suffers from a bias that make truthful revelation difficult and sometimes impossible. This generates inefficient policy choices at the federal level that are often are endogenously characterized by overspending, universalism and uniformity. Building on these findings, I develop a simple theory of fiscal (de-)centralization, which revisits Oates' decentralization theorem in a world of incomplete information and strategic communication. Empirical results from a cross section of U.S. municipalities strongly support the predicted pattern of spending.

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Citation

Kessler, A (2010), ‘DP7910 Communication in Federal Politics: Universalism, Policy Uniformity, and the Optimal Allocation of Fiscal Authority‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 7910. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp7910