Top Banner
Political Economy and Public Policy
31

Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Dec 18, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Political Economy and Public Policy

Page 2: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

• Macroeconomics

• Bureaucracy

• Public Policy

Page 3: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Politics and Markets

• Role of the state in liberal democracies: to induce economic performance

• Pluralist Approach

• Class Approach

Page 4: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Needs of the state

Page 5: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Economic Systems

• Laissez-faire capitalism

• Socialism

• Market socialism

• Soziale Marktwirtschaft

• State-led capitalism

• Mixed economy

Page 6: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Macroeconomics

• Scarcity

• Exchange

• Money

Page 7: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Schools of Macroeconomics

• Mercantilist (nationalist)

• Classical (liberal)

• Keynesianism

• Monetarism

• Supply-side

Page 8: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Resources Called into Government Service

Page 9: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Fiscal Policy

• What

• Who

• How: The Multiplier

Page 10: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Monetary Policy• Who

• What

• How: Money Supply

Page 11: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Central Bank Independence

Page 12: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Bureaucracy

A bureaucracy is the name given to a large organization that is structured hierarchically to carry out specific functions. Generally, most bureaucracies are characterized by an organization chart. The units of the organization are divided according to the specialization and expertise of the employees.

Page 13: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Names for Exec. Bureaucracies

• Whitehall (UK)

• Quai d’Orsay (France)

• Wilhemstraße (Germany)

• Sublime Porte (Turkey)

Page 14: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Choosing the Civil Service

• Birth (“who you are”)

• Political allies (“who you know”)

• Competitive exams (“what you know”)

• Generalist vs. Specialist

Page 15: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Corruption

Page 16: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Corruption likely when

• Adverse government structures

• Information deficits

• Opportunities and incentives

• Social conditions

• Deficits of law

• Imperfect electoral processes

Page 17: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Corruption: Good and Bad

• Least corrupt: Australia*, Austria*, Denmark*, Finland*, Iceland*, New Zealand*, Norway*, Singapore*, Sweden*, and Switzerland*

• Most corrupt: Angola, Bangladesh*, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea*, Haiti*, Myanmar, Nigeria*, and Turkmenistan

• * = Democracies

Page 18: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Types of Corruption

• Cronyism

• Bribery

• Nepotism

• Rent-seeking

• Influence peddling

• Kleptocracy

Page 19: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Kleptocracy

• “Rule by thieves”• The ten most self-enriching leaders of recent times: 1. former Indonesian President Suharto ($15 billion – $35 billion) 2. former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos ($5 billion – $10 billion) 3. former Zairian President Mobutu Sese Seko ($5 billion) 4. former Nigerian President Sani Abacha ($2 billion – $5 billion) 5. former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milošević ($1 billion) 6. former Haitian President Jean-Claude Duvalier ($300 million – $800 million) 7. former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori ($600 million) 8. former Ukrainian Prime Minister Pavlo Lazarenko ($114 million – $200

million) 9. former Nicaraguan President Arnoldo Alemán ($100 million) 10. former Philippine President Joseph Estrada ($78 million – $80 million)

Page 20: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Five Function of Bureaucrats

• Implement the law

• Provide expertise

• Provide research and information to the executive officials

• Provide research and information to legislatures

• Quasi-judicial powers and responsibilities

Page 21: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Weberian Model of Bureaucracy

Bureaucracies as rational, hierarchical organizations in which power flows from the top downward

• Decisions are based on logical reasoning and data analysis.

• Division of labor• Chain of command• Formal rules• Apolitical (neutral decision making)• Advancement based upon merit• Bureaucrats are salaried by superior institutions

Page 22: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Democracy and Bureaucracy

Page 23: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Issues in Politicization of the Bureaucracy

Page 24: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Policymaking

Some issues:

•Management of the economy

•Health care

•Old age pensions

•Inflation

•Unemployment

•Distribution issues

•Crime

•Globalization

•Human rights

•Migration

Page 25: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Human Development Index

Page 26: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Development Strategies

• Import-Substitution Industrialization

• Export-Oriented Industrialization

Page 27: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Should government stay out of the economy?

• Yes: markets choose better than states

• No: the East Asian miracle– Positive aspects– Illiberal aspects

Page 28: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Income Inequality

Page 29: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Income Inequality (Over Time)

Page 30: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Income Inequality – Selected StatesGini coefficient Richest 10%:Poorest 10%

Sweden .250 6.2

Russia .310 7.1

India .325 7.3

France .327 9.1

Britain .360 13.8

United States .466 15.9

South Africa .578 33.1

Brazil .593 68

Namibia .707 128.8

Page 31: Political Economy and Public Policy. Macroeconomics Bureaucracy Public Policy.

Dealing with inequality

• Subsidies

• Transfer payments

• Progressive taxation

• Land reform

• Whom to aid: cities vs. country-side