Discussion of ‘Self-Enforcing Democracy’ by James Fearon Colin Jennings University of Strathclyde.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
DECENTRALIZATION AND FINANCING OF SERVICES Gordana Matković Sofia, July 2007.
Advertisements

PHILIP KITCHER. IN COMPLEX SOCIETIES, THERE IS A LOSS OF COMMUNITY – AND THIS IS DETRIMENTAL TO THE HEALTH OF ANY DEMOCRACY. THE ECONOMIC PRESSURES OF.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 22 Frontiers of Microeconomics.
Readings: Dalton and Wattenberg CH 2-4 Reserves: Mair et al. pgs
Nash’s Theorem Theorem (Nash, 1951): Every finite game (finite number of players, finite number of pure strategies) has at least one mixed-strategy Nash.
Voting for Public Goods (Fisher, Ch. 3) © Allen C. Goodman 2015.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION A difference in access to relevant knowledge is called information asymmetry.
The Three Economic “Isms”
Evolution and Repeated Games D. Fudenberg (Harvard) E. Maskin (IAS, Princeton)
Lectures 7&8 Revisit Elections Now range is left-wing or right-wing politics. Candidate-Voter model Assume even distribution of voters. Voters will vote.
Chapter 11: Political Developments in the Early Republic
POLITICAL CULTURE Fundamental Values, Sentiments, & Knowledge.
Extensive form games and an application: “Economic Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy” Presentation for Political game theory reading group Carl Henrik.
Why Do Some Civil Wars Last So Much Longer Than Others? James Fearon 2004 Journal of Peace Research 41(3): Didi Kuo Gov 2782 March 31, 2008.
Democratization James Robinson Harvard University.
The Political Foundations of Democracy and the Rule of Law Barry R. Weingast (1997) Stefano Acuto
ATTITUDES TOWARDS DEMOCRACY UNDERSTANDING DEMOCRACY.
QR 38, 2/8/07 Elements of games I.The Columbus game II.Basic questions III.Terms.
Models of Bargaining and Coercion Ken SchultzJeff Lewis Stanford UniversityUCLA.
Chapter 16 Public Goods and Public Choice © 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning.
Minorities and Democratization David Epstein & Sharyn O’Halloran Columbia University Bahar Leventoglu SUNY – Stonybrook.
1 Democracy and Data Dissemination: The Effect of Political Regime on Transparency B. Peter Rosendorff, NYU James R. Vreeland, Yale IPES, Princeton, November.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 22 Frontiers of Microeconomics.
There is No Such Thing as a “Dumb” Question. Bates, Greif, Singh Synopsis.
THE VITAL ROLE OF PEOPLE SKILLS TO THE ADMINISTRATIVE PROFESSION INTERNATIONAL ADMINISTRATIVE PROFESSIONALS DAY NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SECRETARIES & ADMINISTRATIVE.
Tasks Stabilize –Force majeure Liberalize –Internal and external Privatize But in what order? –Complements versus substitutes Dilemma –Harden budget constraints.
Collective Action and Collective Decision Making
Introducing Government in America. How Politically Savvy Are You?
SRA – Session “Risk Reduction Culture” Annual Conference of the Society of Risk Analysis Ljubljana, 2006 Annual Conference of the SRA Can Public Participation.
Team Leadership AGED Thought for the day… “Strength lies in differences, not in similarities.” ~ Steven Covey.
United Kingdom.
De Bei ClaudiaComparative Politics – EPS. The origins and change of Electoral Institutions Duverger’s law: “The simple-majority single ballot system favours.
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Key Terms Interest Groups CongressElections Political Parties/Media Misc.
Democratization and democratic survival Political Economy of the Global South Prof. Tyson Roberts.
Self Enforcing Democracy Adam Przeworski (2005) Riti Roy.
Some Conclusions: Doing comparative politics Reflections on Regime Change.
POLITICAL / ECONOMIC IDEOLOGIES An overview of ideas from Communism to Capitalism.
Political and Economic Change AP COMPARATIVE GOVERNMENT.
Unit 2 Vocabulary Review for Test Chapter 4 Political Culture and Ideology Vocabulary.
Results of Asia-Pacific Regional Consultation Meeting.
The Canadian Government Unit 2. Government: Why is it necessary? Government – a system by which a group of people makes the laws (principals and regulations)
1 Lecture 9: Introduction to Democratic Systems SOSC 152.
Public Finance (MPA405) Dr. Khurrum S. Mughal. Lecture 8: Public Choice and the Political Process Public Finance.
FEDERALISM. WHY FEDERALISM? THE FRAMERS NEEDED TO CREATE A STRONG CENTRAL GOVERNMENT WHILE PROTECTING CITIZENS’ FREEDOMS AND ALLOWING THE STATES TO RETAIN.
Why are there only two of them?.  I can explain why the U.S. practices a two- party system as opposed to a multi-party or single-party system.  I can.
Copyright, 2000 © Prentice Hall Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 8 Mass Media and Public Opinion.
C H A P T E R 10 Prepared by: Fernando and Yvonn Quijano © 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Microeconomics: Principles and Tools, 4/e O’Sullivan/
Characteristics of Free Enterprise Capitalism
The European Union and democracy promotion The European Union has political external relations based on the liberal assumption that extending the ‘area.
Introduction to Politics. Learning Objectives Explain why government exists Identify the source of Conflict in American Society Students will be able.
From Economics of Transition to Economics of Institutions. Gérard Roland UC Berkeley.
#2 - Why didn’t Jefferson like Hamilton? Course of a New Nation – A Conflict of Views.
Characteristics of Free Enterprise Capitalism
Monitoring, liquidity provisions, and financial crises
New Republic and Washington’s Presidency
Frontiers of Microeconomics
Chapter 9 The Age of Jackson.
New Republic and Washington’s Presidency,
Chapter 1 Vocabulary Review
Chapter 1 Vocabulary Review
ADM 634 Competitive Success-- snaptutorial.com
ADM 634 Education for Service-- snaptutorial.com
ADM 634 Teaching Effectively-- snaptutorial.com
Cycle of Revolutions.
Frontiers of Microeconomics
GOVERNMENTS AND MARKETS IN A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY
Federalism.
Major Political Systems
Understand the Major ideas of Capitalism, Socialism, and Communism
Presentation transcript:

Discussion of ‘Self-Enforcing Democracy’ by James Fearon Colin Jennings University of Strathclyde

Political Economics – Two broad strands 1.Analysis of equilibria under ‘the rules of the game’ (positive political economy – electoral and post-electoral institutions) 2.Analysis of alternative equilibria if ‘the rules of the game’ are changed (normative or constitutional political economy) Fearon addresses a fundamental question – why obey the rules?

Could appeal to virtue Maybe….but better if you didn’t have to rely on that! The public must be able to threaten incumbents with rebellion To do this they must be able to coordinate If this achieved then democracy can be self-enforcing

The paper contrasts with two alternatives based on class conflict 1.Przeworski (1991) -if electoral odds are good & rebellion costs relatively low – opposing groups prefer elections -but elections are like a coin-flip -if pie divisible – elections remain puzzling 2.Acemoglu & Robinson (2000, 2001) -rich & powerful group cannot commit to future transfers to poor -election set tax rates now (favourable to the majority poor) -but is this an election or dictatorship by the proletariat

Fearon’s Theory - Elections emerge as a coordination device Model 1 – Public Information about Government Actions all citizens know all citizens payoffs social consensus equilibrium so long as all players are patient enough requires collective reputation elections make no difference!

Model 2 – Private Observation of Government Performance citizens know only their own payoffs need to make private signals public Proposition 5 – if can’t make protest visible – peaceful N.E. – but dictatorial Elections to the rescue! Two chances to rebel (1) if elections not held (2) if lose but doesn’t stand down Shifts information provision from individual citizens to government

Model 3 – Noisy Government Performance Now an inefficiency – mistaken rebellions will occur Payoffs to citizens reduced due to increased payments to incumbents (to compensate for lower future payments) Elections to the rescue again Avoids unnecessary rebellions, although governments will sometimes be mistakenly voted out

General Comments Is free-riding a more serious problem – prior resolution of this seems very important The value of elections increases with each model. But arguably model 1 is the most accurate description of mature democracies (due to media, education..). Does this imply that elections are overrated? At the risk of stretching things too far, is this a possibility? Elections are established under conditions closer to models 2 & 3 and approach model 1. In time a strong sense of adhering to rules perhaps does begin to apply (important if coordination may fail). Would link to recent increased emphasis on the role of public motivation in political economy