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Author(s)

David Austen-Smith

Wiola Dziuda

Bard Harstad

Antoine Loeper

Why do rational politicians choose inefficient policy instruments? Environmental regulation, for example, often takes the form of technology standards and quotas even when cost-effective Pigou taxes are available. To shed light on this puzzle, we present a stochastic game with multiple legislative veto players and show that inefficient policy instruments are politically easier than efficient instruments to repeal. Anticipating this, heterogeneous legislators agree more readily on an inefficient policy instrument. We describe when inefficient instruments are likely to be chosen, and predict that they are used more frequently in (moderately) polarized political environments and in volatile economic environments. We show conditions under which players strictly benefit from the availability of the inefficient instrument.
Date Published: 2019
Citations: Austen-Smith, David, Wiola Dziuda, Bard Harstad, Antoine Loeper. 2019. Gridlock and Inefficient Policy Instruments. Theoretical Economics. (4)1483-1534.