PUBLIC CHOICE THEORY

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PUBLIC CHOICE THEORY Oh, No! Another unseen hand metaphor

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PUBLIC CHOICE THEORY. Oh, No! Another unseen hand metaphor. All your life, you’ve been taught. Democratic governments try to improve society A responsible electorate can toss the bums out Poor leadership is to blame for political apathy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of PUBLIC CHOICE THEORY

Page 1: PUBLIC CHOICE THEORY

PUBLIC CHOICE THEORY

Oh, No!Another unseen hand metaphor

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All your life, you’ve been taught

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• Democratic governments try to improve society

• A responsible electorate can toss the bums out

• Poor leadership is to blame for political apathy

• You should vote and participate in the political process

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Public choice economistssay

All this good government stuff is

bunk!

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Except for the extreme factions,

There’s no difference between the political

parties

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Special interests will prevail over the public interest

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It is not rational to vote

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Bureaucrats are inefficient

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Churchill says -

“Democracy is the worst form of government…

except for the

alternatives”

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4 KEY IDEAS IN PUBLIC-CHOICE

ECONOMICS

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1. Is it rational for government

leaders to favor special interests over the general public interest?

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• Special interests have a big stake in government

• So they take a big interest in government• When they give contributions, politicians

know it• Each member of the public may lose only

a little bit, when a special interest gets what it wants –

so the public doesn’t pay attention

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•The public tends to be ignorant

•Lobbyists make themselves experts

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The more concentrated the benefit,

andThe more diffuse the cost

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The more likely the special

interest gets its way

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2. Why are politicians mainly in the middle of

the road?

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The median-voter

hypothesis

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Prediction #1 – in primaries, candidates take a more extreme position, appealing to the median voter of

their party

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Prediction #2 – in general elections, candidates

take a middle of the road position, appealing to the

median voter of the general population

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3. Are people rational or irrational when they

spend little time evaluating candidates before they vote and

when they don’t vote?

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Rational Ignorance

Why spend the time to be informed when your

single vote counts so little?

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Why do people even vote at all?

Voting is a consumption activity –

It provides a feeling of civic dutyand

You can complain without feeling guilty

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4. What is the effect of bureaucratic

entrepreneurs on government?

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A business is successful

If it can maximize profit

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A bureaucrat is successful

If she or he can maximize power

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Bureaucrats have a smaller department if they become more

efficient

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Bureaucrats are rewarded When they expand

the duties and clientele of their departments

With a larger department comes• A larger office• A higher salary• A larger pension