Clientelism, Credibility, and the Policy Choices of Young Democracies
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Abstract
This article identifies for the first time systematic performance differences between younger and older democracies and argues that these are driven by the inability of political competitors to make broadly credible preelectoral promises to voters. Younger democracies are more corrupt; exhibit less rule of law, lower levels of bureaucratic quality and secondary school enrollment, and more restrictions on the media; and spend more on public investment and government workers. This pattern is exactly consistent with the predictions of Keefer and Vlaicu (n.d.) . The inability of political competitors to make credible promises to citizens leads them to prefer clientelist policies: to underprovide nontargeted goods,…
Citation impact
894
total citations
- FWCI
- 84.38
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 67
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Clientelism
- Credibility
- Competitor analysis
- Politics
- Bureaucracy
- Political economy
- Political science
- Government (linguistics)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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