Sectorial public power and endogenous growth
Fecha de publicación
1998Author
Mayer-Foulkes, David
Formato
application/PDF
URL del recurso
http://hdl.handle.net/11651/5393Idioma
eng
Acceso
Acceso abierto
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The concept of sectorial political economy is defined using a model of fragmented perfect competition and introduced in an dynamic game in which the government is a Stackelberg leader and the representative families of each sector follow. Sectors produce different bundles of goods by means of production functions which imply different kinds of economic dependencies and which may involve public inputs on which the government takes strategic decisions. The political power of each sector is described in terms of its passive resitance (resistance to taxation), its organized resistance (an effective demand for minimum welfare), and its socially organized power (the presence of its objectives in the government objetive funciton). The determinants of income distribution and growth, the mechanisms and incentives for the allocation of public goods, and the incentives for political organization, are functions of political power which are strikingly different if the economy is open of closed. The model analyzes long-term equilibria in political economy and tendencies for change in periods of political transition due to technical or trade policy changes.
Editorial
Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, División de Economía
Derechos
El Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas A.C. CIDE autoriza a poner en acceso abierto de conformidad con las licencias CREATIVE COMMONS, aprobadas por el Consejo Académico Administrativo del CIDE, las cuales establecen los parámetros de difusión de las obras con fines no comerciales. Lo anterior sin perjuicio de los derechos morales que corresponden a los autores.
Tipo
Documento de trabajo
Cita
Mayer-Foulkes, David. "Sectorial public power and endogenous growth". Documento de trabajo. , 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/11651/5393Materia
Markets -- Econometric models.
Endogenous growth (Economics) -- Econometric models.