Centralization and accountability: theory and evidence from the Clean Air Act

Author

Boffa, Federico

Piolatto, Amedeo

Ponzetto, Giacomo A. M.

Publication date

2017-10-09T07:51:56Z

2017-10-09T07:51:56Z

2012

Abstract

This paper studies fiscal federalism when voter information varies across regions. We develop a model of political agency with heterogeneously informed voters. Rentseeking politicians provide public goods to win the votes of the informed. As a result, rent extraction is lower in regions with higher information. In equilibrium, electoral discipline has decreasing returns. Thus, political centralization efficiently reduces aggregate rent extraction. The model predicts that a region’s benefits from centralization are decreasing in its residents’information. We test this prediction using panel data on pollutant emissions across U.S. states. The 1970 Clean Air Act centralized environmental policy at the federal level. In line with our theory, we find that centralization induced a differential decrease in pollution for uninformed relative to informed states.

Document Type

Working document

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Descentralització administrativa; Responsabilitat de l'Estat; Contaminació; Política ambiental; Decentralization in government; Government liability; Pollution; Environmental policy

Publisher

Institut d’Economia de Barcelona

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://www.ieb.ub.edu/2012022157/ieb/ultimes-publicacions

IEB Working Paper 2012/14

[WP E-IEB12/14]

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd, (c) Boffa et al., 2012

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/

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