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Electoral rules, political competition and fiscal spending: regression discontinuity evidence from brazilian municipalities

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TD 208 - Marcos Chamon; Joao Mello; Sergio Firpo.pdf (572.0Kb)
Date
2010-06-16
Author
Chamon, Marcos
Mello, João Manoel Pinho de
Firpo, Sergio Pinheiro
Metadata
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Abstract
We exploit a discontinuity in Brazilian municipal election rules to investigate whether political competition has a causal impact on policy choices. In municipalities with less than 200,000 voters mayors are elected with a plurality of the vote. In municipalities with more than 200,000 voters a run-off election takes place among the top two candidates if neither achieves a majority of the votes. At a first stage, we show that the possibility of runoff increases political competition. At a second stage, we use the discontinuity as a source of exogenous variation to infer causality from political competition to fiscal policy. Our second stage results suggest that political competition induces more investment and less current spending, particularly personnel expenses. Furthermore, the impact of political competition is larger when incumbents can run for reelection, suggesting incentives matter insofar as incumbents can themselves remain in office.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10438/6680
Collections
  • FGV EESP - Textos para Discussão / Working Paper Series [534]
Knowledge Areas
Economia
Subject
Economia
Keyword
Electoral systems
Strategic voting
Political competition
Regression discontinuity
Fiscal Spending

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