A Club to Beat down the Tariff: The Political Economy of Tax Swaps and the Interest Group Origins of the 16th Amendment

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phillip W. Magness
2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wang Zuofa

AbstractThe implementation of the bankruptcy law of China deviates much from the expectation of the legislature. This article draws on political economy analysis, especially the interest group approach, to provide an explanation of the causes of the deviation and predict what the future of the modification and reform of the law might be. This article also describes the China context in using public choice theory to explain legal issues.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (10) ◽  
pp. 732-739 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Croke ◽  
Mariana Binti Mohd Yusoff ◽  
Zalilah Abdullah ◽  
Ainul Nadziha Mohd Hanafiah ◽  
Khairiah Mokhtaruddin ◽  
...  

Abstract There is growing evidence that political economy factors are central to whether or not proposed health financing reforms are adopted, but there is little consensus about which political and institutional factors determine the fate of reform proposals. One set of scholars see the relative strength of interest groups in favour of and opposed to reform as the determining factor. An alternative literature identifies aspects of a country’s political institutions–specifically the number and strength of formal ‘veto gates’ in the political decision-making process—as a key predictor of reform’s prospects. A third group of scholars highlight path dependence and ‘policy feedback’ effects, stressing that the sequence in which health policies are implemented determines the set of feasible reform paths, since successive policy regimes bring into existence patterns of public opinion and interest group mobilization which can lock in the status quo. We examine these theories in the context of Malaysia, a successful health system which has experienced several instances of proposed, but ultimately blocked, health financing reforms. We argue that policy feedback effects on public opinion were the most important factor inhibiting changes to Malaysia’s health financing system. Interest group opposition was a closely related factor; this opposition was particularly powerful because political leaders perceived that it had strong public support. Institutional veto gates, by contrast, played a minimal role in preventing health financing reform in Malaysia. Malaysia’s dramatic early success at achieving near-universal access to public sector healthcare at low cost created public opinion resistant to any change which could threaten the status quo. We conclude by analysing the implications of these dynamics for future attempts at health financing reform in Malaysia.


2020 ◽  
pp. 67-93
Author(s):  
Maitreesh Ghatak ◽  
Ritwika Sen

The Political Economy and Development of India (PEDI) proposes what is now a very well-known hypothesis about the reasons for the low-growth regime that India experienced from the 60s to the early 80s: interest-group politics in a democracy leads to populism and subsidies, choking off resources for accumulation through public investment in infrastructure. This political economy of constraints, according to Bardhan, seems to have blocked the economy’s escape from a low-level equilibrium trap of low growth. This chapter looks at a part of Bardhan’s argument, namely the relationship between subsidies and growth. The chapter studies the patterns of growth in income per capita and subsidies over the period 1980–81 to 2013–14 and finds, contrary to PEDI, that both economic growth and subsidies increased. Put together, these trends do not provide evidence in favour of the ‘Bardhan subsidy hypothesis’ that the subsidy Raj was the most important binding constraint to economic growth in the 1980s.


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