Veto Players and the Choice of Monetary Institutions

2002 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 775-802 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Hallerberg

I argue that two types of veto players matter in the choice of monetary institutions: party veto players and subnational governments, which are strong in federal systems but weak in unitary systems. A crucial issue is whether voters can readily identify the manipulation of the economy with party players. A second issue concerns the national party veto player's ability to control either fiscal or monetary policy. In one-party unitary governments identification and control are clear; parties where such governments are common prefer flexible exchange rates and dependent central banks. In multiparty coalition governments in unitary systems, identification is traditionally difficult, and the ability to target benefits to specific constituencies under fiscal policy makes fiscal policy autonomy more attractive for coalition governments. Such governments prefer central banks that are politically independent but that finance government debt. Under federalism, parties that constitute the central government have less control over fiscal policy and they prefer flexible exchange rates. Subnational governments do not support a dependent central bank that gives more power to the central government.

1982 ◽  
Vol 118 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-130
Author(s):  
Horst Herberg ◽  
Helmut Hesse ◽  
Andreas Schuseil

Author(s):  
Aldo Madariaga

This chapter focuses on the locking-in of exchange rates and industrial policies in institutional frameworks, including the constitution that reduced partisan influences and made future changes and reforms more difficult. It formulates and tests the operation of locking-in neoliberal policy alternatives through constitutionalization and the embeddedness of exchange rates and industrial policies in institutional frameworks. It also discusses the delegation of policymaking authority to nonelected bureaucratic agencies that lies at the heart of constitutionalized lock-in. The chapter emphasizes the importance of support creation and opposition blockade in reducing both representation and the agency of unelected bureaucrats in policymaking. It examines countries that attempted to lock-in neoliberalism through the establishment of independent central banks and fiscal policy rules.


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