Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Kindness is Airborne

         Many a times, it's found that we don't understand the people's problems with our naked eyes. Just raise your eyes and look around. The Earth is wounded.
         It happen a day ago, I was on my way home, walking with my friends. Suddenly, an old man approached us asking, "Young lads, would you mind helping me by giving some few pennies because I want to have a cup of tea?" 

Walk the Blues Away – Chi Chi Talks
       

         Rain started, we sheltered under a grocery shop near us. A tea vendor shouting, " Garam Chai, Chai Lelo." We were four of us and we bought 4 cups first but again the old man asked for a cup of tea.
 
        Anil one among us said to the man, " Get off ! you oldie." We started to chat all sorts of things from upside down  again. I felt quit sad so do Nirmal for the old man. I offered him a cup of tea. The old man started to take sips out of the glass cup. 

        He took out 4 tiny packets of biscuits and handed to us saying, " I went to a dog shop to sell my dog and the owner of the shop gave me 500. I managed to survive for 9 days. I was left 20 rupees and I bought 4 packets to eat them for 4 days. You young fellows offered me a cup of tea in this rainy evening when I needed tea the most." 

        We were shocked after listening this. I asked the man why he had sold his dog. He cried and replied, " I'm dying. I have blood cancer. It's the  dog who is my best friend. I love him so much that's why I had to send him away." We gave him some money but he refused. 

            You see in life, we may be having so many people around us as friends but there are a few among them who will be always by your side. The kindness is airborne, you don't need any explanation for kindness. 

Sunday, July 19, 2020

PUBLIC ECONOMICS IMPORTANCE

PUBLIC ECONOMICS IMPORTANCE

                                                                                                                 By - Subham Mondal


 

I. INTRODUCTION

A significant portion of government activity is devoted to transfer of resourced between citizens. Some of these transfers, such as those to the poor, seem to be consistent with traditional social welfare objectives. Others are directed to so-called special-interest groups, such as farmers, unions, professionals groups, or particular firms and industries. Political economy suggests at least two reasons why politicians may choose to make such transfers. First, interest groups may be able to enhance politicians’ chances of reelection by providing campaign contributions or political support. Second, interest groups can improve politicians’ financial well-being by, for example, providing bribes, business for firms in which they have a financial interest, or future employment opportunities.

An important question in political economy concerns the form of transfers to special interests. While redistribution towards the poor generally takes the form of cash and in kind transfers, redistribution to special interests is typically less much direct. What explains the method chosen to redistribute to special interests?     

One perspective on this issue, often associated with the “Chicago School” of political economy, is that political competition will ensure that the most efficient method of redistribution available is chosen e.g. the US Government imposed oil imports quotas, rather than made direct cash transfers to the oil industry, reflected the superior efficiency of such quotas. The Chicago view has the provocative served method of redistribution is inefficient, this analysis must be missing something. The challenge for political economy, therefore, is to provide efficiency explanations for observed transfer mechanism.

An alternative view, associated with the “Virginia School” of political economy, stresses the importance of imperfect information in explaining the form of transfers. Citizens are presumed to be poorly informed about the effects of different policies, and this leads politicians to select inefficient “sneaky” methods of redistribution over more transparent efficient methods. For example, politicians will favor policies that serve to transfer resources but may be justifiable on other, more palatable grounds so called disguised transfers mechanisms. For example, a road may be laid out in such a way as to increase the value of certain pieces of real estate when laying out the road in its optimal location and making cash transfers to the owners of this real estate would be more efficient. The idea is that voters do not know the optimal location of the road and therefore are unable to detect the real motivation for its location. Policies that transfer resources by changing market prices, such as quotas or mandates, fall into this category.

While the Virginia view is intuitively appealing, it lacks a solid analytical foundation. The idea that voters remain rationally ignorant because the expected benefits from becoming informed are small relative to costs. However, Becker (1976) and Wittman (1989) question why voters should have biased beliefs about the effects of policies and how they could be persistently fooled. It is by no means clear that the Virginia view can be justified without making such unreasonable assumptions.

This paper focuses on understanding the form of transfers in an environment in which politicians have a financial incentive to make transfers to a special interest and have available both direct cash transfers and a disguised transfer’s mechanism. In the model, the disguised transfer mechanism is a public project. Introducing the project not only benefits the special interests but also, under certain conditions, enhances the welfare of the citizens. There is asymmetric information in the sense that the conditions are satisfied that the incumbent politician has more information about whether these conditions are satisfied than the citizens do. Furthermore, since the benefits of the project are stochastic, citizens observe only a noisy signal of whether it was warranted ex post. Thus when they observe the implementation of the project, they cannot tell whether the politician is acting in their interest or simply making transfers to the special interests.

II. PREMISES

The model suggests that if politicians are all identical and known to be so, transfers to the special interest will be made efficient despite the availability of a disguised transfer mechanism. Citizens will allocate political support in such a way as to make efficient behavior in the incumbent politician’s interest. However, if politicians differ, some being susceptible to bribes and others not, and if politicians’ types are not perfectly observable to citizens, then transfers to the special interest will sometimes be made inefficiently. This reflects the fact that politicians have incentives to build reputations. “Bad” politicians (i.e. those susceptible to bribes) will sometimes prefer to implement the project when it is not warranted because making direct cash transfers does greater damage to their reputations. The paper therefore shows how a combination of asymmetric information about policies and politicians can explain the choice of inefficient methods of redistribution in a world in which voters are rational.

In equilibrium, politicians set the policy at a level that maximizes the well-being of those groups or individuals who hold political power. Since, these agents do not care about the costs and benefits that fall on others in society, the equilibrium level of the policy is claimed to be “inefficient.”

By assumption, politicians are constrained to use a given tax rule and can redistribute only by choosing different levels of the policy. At an equilibrium, any change in the level of the policy will reduce the well-being of the politically influential. The equilibrium utility allocation is therefore on the (second-best) Pareto frontier. This paper is that it assumes that politicians have two different methods of redistribution available.

In this paper, concern about reputation is key to explaining the inefficiency.

Traders in financial district with trading screen data.


The Model

We employ an agency style model of political competition of the sort pioneered by Barro (1973) and Ferejohn (1986) and further developed by Austen-Smith and Banks (1989) and Banks and Sundaram (1993). We consider a two-period model. In the first period, an incumbent politician must decide whether or not to introduce a public project. The incumbent also has the ability to make direct cash transfers from the citizens to the special interest, so that there is no need to use the project as a transfer device. At the end of the first period, an election is held. The incumbent faces a randomly drawn challenger. The political power is held by the citizens, who alone determine the outcome of the election. In the second period, the winner of the election simply selects a cash transfer to the special interest.

Citizens and the Special Interest

A single representative citizen receives income yc at the beginning of both periods. The citizen gets utility from consumption and public projects. His utility per period is given by   , where t denotes taxes and B represents the benefits from public projects. His sole decision is whether to reelect the incumbent at the end of the first period.

Along with the citizens, there is a special interest that derives income indirectly from public projects (e.g., the special interest might be a firm that supplies publicity provided goods). The special interest may also receive income directly through government transfers. The special interest’s income in each period is given by s , where R denotes the income derived from public expenditures and T is the direct cash transfer.

Policies

In each period, the politician holding office chooses a cash transfer T > 0 to the special interest. In the first period, the incumbent must also decide whether or not to implement a public project. The project costs an amount C and is financed by taxation of the citizen. It provides income R, for the special interest. The benefit the project provides to the citizen is uncertain. It may produce BH or BL units of benefits, BH > BL > 0. The probability that the project will produce high benefits (i.e., that B = BH) is denoted . This probability can take on one of two values, 0 or 1. The incumbent is assumed to observe the value of  prior to deciding whether to implement the project.

The ex ante probability that the project is likely to yield high benefits (i.e., that  = 1) is π. The expected net gain to the citizen from the project when the probability that it produces high benefits is  is denoted  ( ) that is,  ( ) = BH + (1 – .

We make the following key assumption concerning the efficiency of the project.

Assumption 1. (i)  (  1) > 0 and (ii)  (  0) < .

When  = 1, the project yields a positive expected net gain to the citizen. When  = 0, the citizen would actually be better off with a tax financed transfer of Rs, to the special interest than with the €implementation of the project. Thus when  = 1, the project is efficient, when  = 0, introducing the project is an inefficient way to make a transfer of Rs to the special interest.

 

Politicians

Politicians come in two types: “good” (i= g) and “bad” (i = b). Both types of politicians receive zero utility when not in office and discount the future according to the discount rate . When a good politician is in office, his payoff depends positively on the utility gain his decisions generate for the citizen. Thus a good politician’s utility per period is   , where g (. ) is some smooth, increasing function. 

A bad politician cares not only about the utility he generates for the citizen, but also about the income received by the special interest. A bad politician is susceptible to bribes and other nonmonetary rewards offered by the special interest. The more income the special interest receives, the greater the reward given to the politician. Thus, when a bad politician is in power, his utility per period is (     ), where  ( . ) is smooth, increasing in both arguments, and strictly concave.

There are two assumptions concerning a bad politician’s preferences. The first is that, from a bad politician’s viewpoint, the gain to the special interest resulting from introducing the project when   0  is more than sufficient to offset the loss to the citizen.

Assumption 2: b (  ( 0 ), s ) > b ( 0, 0 ).

For the second assumption, let T*( ) denote the direct cash transfer that would maximize a bad politician’s utility per period when the pretransfer utility gain for the citizen is  and the pretransfer income for the special interest is  ; that is,

           T*( ) = argmax b (    + T ).      

Assumption 3 (i) T*( ) (0, yc  C) and (ii) b *( )    b ( ) < b *(0, 0)

Part i says that over the relevant range, a bad politician wishes to make some transfers to the special interest but does not want to bankrupt the citizen) Part ii implies that the loss in utility resulting from forgoing the optimal direct cash transfer is always less than the discounted value of the maximal utility obtainable when ( ) = (0, 0).

The Information Structure

The citizen’s decision whether to reelect the incumbent politician at the end of the first period is complicated by imperfect information. First, there is “policy uncertainty” the citizen is unable to observe the realization of the random variable . Thus only the incumbent knows whether the project is or is not in the citizen’s interest. The idea is that the results of the study are observed only by the incumbent, and there is no way of credibly conveying them to the citizen. Naturally, the citizen can observe the level of benefits generated by the project, but this is not a perfectly revealing signal. Even when  = 1 and the project is warranted, it may fail to produce high benefits.

The citizen also faces “politician uncertainty” he cannot directly observe whether politicians are good or bad. The citizen is not completely uninformed for, when he first encounters a politician, he does observe some signal of his type. This signal allows the citizen to form an initial estimate of the likelihood that the politician is good. Let 1 (0, 1) denote the citizen’s estimate of the probability that the incumbent is god at the beginning of the first period. Thus 1 is the incumbent’s initial reputation. The incumbent is assumed to be aware of his initial reputation. Let c denote the challenger’s initial reputation, that is, the citizen’s estimate of the probability that the challenger is good. This is not known by the citizen or the incumbent until the end of the first period, when the challenger is selected. We assume that c is drawn from some cumulative distribution function G( ). This cumulative distribution function is assumed to be smooth and increasing and to satisfy the property that G(0) = 0.

The Game and the Definition of Equilibrium

This two-period model defines a game among the incumbent, challenger, and citizen. At the beginning of the game, nature chooses the type of the incumbent (i {b, g}). Nature then chooses the probability that the project will produce high benefit (     0, 1}). This choice is observed solely by the incumbent The citizen knows only that the probability that  = 1 is π. The incumbent must then choose a transfer to the special interest and decide whether or not to implement the project. Formally, the incumbent can be thought of as choosing a project decision transfer pair (  {P, N } X +, where D = P (N) means that the project is (is not) implemented. If the project is implemented, nature chooses the benefits it produces for the citizen. These benefits are BH with probability and BL with probability The incumbent’s first-period record is the triple (D, T, B).

The election is held at the end of the first period. Nature chooses the type of the challenger (i {b, g}), and the citizen observes some noisy information about his type. In particular, the noise is such that his estimate of the probability that the challenger is good is c, where c is drawn from the cumulative distribution function G ( ). Knowing c and the incumbent’s first-period record, the citizen must decide whom to elect. Once the election is over, the winning politician makes a transfer decision and the game ends.

Strategies

A strategy for the incumbent has two components. The first is a rule that specifies a project and transfer decision in the first period for each type the incumbent might be and each realization of The second component is a rule that specifies a transfer decision in the second period should the incumbent be reelected. Since the game ends at the end of the second period, this second-period decision depends only on the incumbent’s type.

A strategy for the challenger is simply a rule that specifies the transfer he will make should he be elected. Again this decision will simply depend on the type. A strategy for the citizen is a rule that specifies the probability that he will re-elect the incumbent. This rule will depend on the incumbent’s first period record (D, T, B) and the initial reputation of the challenger c.

A perfect Bayesian equilibrium of this game consists of a strategy for the incumbent, a strategy for the challenger, and a strategy and beliefs for the citizen that satisfy four properties.

(i)                 The citizen’s beliefs are consistent with the incumbent’s strategy in the sense that they are generated by Bayes updating where possible.

(ii)               The citizen’s strategy is optimal given these beliefs and the strategies of the incumbent and challenger.

(iii)             The incumbent’s strategy is optimal given the citizen’s beliefs and strategy and the challenger’s strategy.

(iv)              The challenger’s strategy is optimal.

Inefficient Transfers

The task of this section is to solve for the equilibrium of the game and to analyze the incumbent’s equilibrium policy choices. Equilibrium will be solved for by backward induction.

Second-Period Behavior of Politicians

Suppose that the incumbent is in power in the second period. If he is good, he will make no cash transfers to the special interest and his second-period utility will be g (0). If he is bad, he will make a cash transfer T0 = T*(0, 0) and obtain a utility level b* (0, 0.). If the challenger is in power in the second period, he will follow exactly the same strategy as the incumbent. If good, he will make no transfer, if bad; he will make a transfer T0.

The Citizen’s behavior

The citizen will be better off with a good politician in power in the second period than with a bad one. He will therefore elect that politician who he believes is most likely to be good. Thus if (D,T,B) denotes the citizen’s estimate of the probability that the incumbent is good when his first-period record is (D,T,B) and if the challenger’s reputation is c , the citizen will reelect the incumbent if and only if a (D,T,B) > c.                                                                          Since the challenger’s reputation is a random draw from the cumulative distribution function G( ), the probability that the incumbent will be reelected is simply G ( (D,T,B)).

The Incumbent’s First-Period Behavior and the Citizen’s Beliefs

Suppose that the probability that the project will yield high benefits is . If the incumbent is good and selects a transfer T, his expected payoff will be

                        Vg (N,T, ) =  vg ( T) + G( (N, T, 0)) g (0)                           (2)

If he does not implement the project and

Vg (P,T, )  =  vg ( ( ) – T) + G(α(P,T,BH))                       (3)

                          + (1 - ) G (α (P,T,BL))] vg (0)

If he does. If the incumbent is bad, his expected payoff will be

                        Vb(N,T, )  =  b ( T,T) + G(α(N,T,0) b*(0,0)                      (4)

If the project is not implemented and

   Vb (P, T, ) = b ( ( )  T, Rs + T) + [ G(α(P,T,BH))                (5)

                          + (1 - ) G (α (P,T,BL))} b*(0, 0)

If it is.

The first-period strategy that maximizes the incumbent’s expected payoff will obviously depend on the citizen’s beliefs. In this game, as in others, there exist equilibria than depend on rather unnatural out-of-equilibrium beliefs. Thus there exist equilibria in which the incumbent (whether good or bad) always makes cash transfers to the special interest.

We shall focus on equilibria in which the citizen’s beliefs (on and off the equilibrium path) satisfy that , ceteris paribus, a first-period record with lower cash transfers cannot result in more pessimistic beliefs about the incumbent. The citizen has monotonic beliefs if, for any paid of first-period records (D,T,B) and (D,T’,B) such that T’ > T, α(D,T,B) α(D,T,B). We shall refer to an equilibrium with this property as an equilibrium with monotonic beliefs (EMB).

A good incumbent will never choose to make cash transfers to the special interest in the first period. Making such transfers lowers his first-period utility and, if the citizen has monotonic beliefs, reduces his probability of reelection. If the citizen observes the incumbent making a cash transfer, he will conclude that he is bad and vote him out of office. This implies that if a bad incumbent does choose to make cash transfers in the first period, he might choose those actions that maximize his first-period utility. When  = 0, this means not implementing the project and choosing the cash transfer T0. When   = 1, this  implies  undertaking  the  project  and  selecting  the  cash  transfer T1. = T*( ( 1),Rs). We therefore have the following result.

In an EMB, a good incumbent chooses (P, 0) or (N, 0). A bad incumbent chooses (P, 0), (N, 0), or (P,T1) when  = 1 and (P, 0), (N,0), or (N,T0) when  = 0.

We let gP.( ) ( gN.( )) denote the probability that a good incumbent will choose (not) to implement the project when the probability that it yields high benefits is . A good incumbent will be said to behave efficiently if he always implements (does not implement) the project when  = 1 (  = 0.), that is, if gP. ( 1) = 1 and gN. ( 0) = 1. Similarly, we let bP. ( ) denote the probability that a bad incumbent chooses (P, 0) when the probability that the project will yield high benefits is , bN ( ) denote the probability that he chooses (N,0), and bU ( ) denote the probability that he acts in an unconstrained manner. Acting in an unconstrained manner involves choosing (P,T1) when  = 1 and (N, T0) when  = 0. Again, we shall say that a bad incumbent behaves efficiently if he always chooses (not) to implement the project when  = 1 (  = 0), that is if bP, ( 1) + bU, ( 1) = 1 and bN( 0) + bU ( 0) = 1. A bad incumbent make inefficient transfers to the special interest if he ever implements the project when  = 0, that is, if bP ( 0) > 0.

If the incumbent’s first-period record in equilibrium is (P,0,BH), then Bayes’s rule implies that

(P,0,BH) =

 

(6)

The numerator is the probability that a good incumbent would generate this record, and the denominator is the probability that either type of incumbent would generate it. If the citizen observes the records (P,T1, BH), (P,T1, BL), or (N,T0, 0), will equal zero.

Stock market big data chart analysis investment finance graph

III. Propositions

Proposition 1: Under assumptions 1-3, there exists some    such that, in any EMB, at least one type of incumbent behaves inefficiently if the incumbent’s initial reputation , exceeds

Proof. Define  from the equality

(7)

That  follows from assumption 3). Here the first step involves showing that in any EMB in which both types of incumbent behave efficiently, a bad incumbent does not make positive cash transfers if .

If both types of incumbent behave efficiently, then when  , a good incumbent selects (N,)) and a bad incumbent selects (N,0) or(N,T0); when , a good incumbent selects (P,0) and a bad incumbent selects (P,0) or (P,T1). Thus the citizen’s beliefs must be such that

and

If in equilibrium a bad incumbent chooses cash transfers, then he must choose either (N,T0) when  or (P,T1) when  . Consider the first possibility. Since (N,T0, 0) must equal zero, his payoff from choosing (N,T0) is (0,0). But the payoff from selecting (N, 0) is

 (0, 0) 

Since   (7) implies that this payoff exceeds  (0,0). This equilibrium cannot involve his choosing (N,T0). The possibility of his choosing (P,T1) is similarly eliminated.

Suppose that there existed such an equilibrium. Then

   

and the equilibrium payoff to a bad incumbent from choosing (N,0) when is  (0,0) + (0,0). Assumption 2 implies that this is less than (0,0), which is the payoff from choosing (P,0)  a contradiction.

If a bad incumbent’s initial reputation is high, he is unwilling to lose it by making cash transfers to the special interest. It follows that equilibrium cannot involve such transfers. In any efficient equilibrium, therefore, there can be no reputational penalty for simply implementing the project (i.e., (P,0,BH) =     (P,0,BL) = (N,0,0)). However, if this were the case, a bad incumbent would always implement the project irrespective of , which is inefficient. Thus equilibrium cannot be efficient.

Assumption 4. (i)

(ii)

Part I states that the utility gain of generating the citizen an expected utility increase of .exceeds the discounted value of one period of ego rent. Part ii states a similar condition for the utility loss from generating the citizen an expected utility gain of .

Proposition 2. Under assumptions 1-3, there exists   (0, 1) such that a bad incumbent’s always choosing (P, 0) and a good incumbent’s behavior efficiently is an EMB if the incumbent’s initial reputation exceeds . Moreover, if assumption 4 is satisfied, this is the unique EMB.

Proof: If a good incumbent behaves efficiently and a bad incumbent always chooses  the citizen’s beliefs along the equilibrium path given by:

Now define the function  as follows:

   

Note that  is continuous and increasing in both its arguments and that Let  be the smallest value of  such that

and

Observe that assumption 1, 2 and 3 and the properties of  guarantee that such a value exists and is an element of (0, 1).

We now demonstrate that, for , a bad incumbent’s always choosing (P, 0) and a good incumbent’s behaving efficiently is an EMB with out-of-equilibrium beliefs given by  for all T > 0. We first check that a good incumbent behaves efficiently. It is clear that he will choose (N, 0) when , since    this is his one – period optimum and it gets him re-elected with probability one. When   , the definition of  implies that payoff from ( P , 0 ).

                                 

 exceeds the payoff from selecting ( N, 0 ),

Next we check that a bad incumbent always wants to choose (P, 0). When , the payoff from choosing (P, 0) is

                            

Since is increasing in , this exceeds the payoff from choosing when  Thus it must exceed the payoff from choosing which is independent of The definition of  guarantees that the payoff from choosing exceeds the payoff from

    To complete the proof, we must show that this is the unique EMB under assumption 4 if   As noted in the text, assumption 4 implies that a good incumbent always behaves efficiently. This implies that the citizen’s beliefs must satisfy

                

            

          

Moreover, if in equilibrium a bad incumbent chooses  or , the citizen’s beliefs at these first-period records must be that the incumbent is bad. Since the relative benefit of selecting  has not decreased, it follows from our earlier argument that the bad incumbent’s choice of  is the only possible outcome.

 In equilibrium, a bad incumbent knows that if he chooses to make direct cash transfers, his type will be revealed and he will be voted out of office. An alternative way of transferring extra income to the special interest is to undertake the project when  = . While the citizen understands the bad incumbent’s incentives, he cannot perfectly infer from a record of introducing the project that an incumbent is bad. The reason is that a good incumbent undertakes the project when  =  and the citizen cannot observe the realization of .

The citizen is unable to commit to a voting strategy ex ante. If the citizen could commit, transfers would be made efficiency.

Assumption 5, (i)  and

(ii)  

Part I simply reverse part I of assumption 4, and part ii says that a bad incumbent would also be willing to forgo the gains from unconstrained behavior when   =  to stay in office.

PROPOSITION 3. Under assumption 1-3 and 5, there exists   (0,1) such that both types of incumbent always choosing (N,0) is an EMB if the incumbent’s initial reputation exceeds

Proof. Define by the equality.

  

     G ( ) = max                                                  (8)       

 

That (0, 1) follows from assumption 5. We claim that if I > both types of incumbent choosing (N,0) is an EMB supported by the out-of-equilibrium beliefs (D,T,B) = 0 for all (D,T,B) (N,0,0).

If both types of incumbent always choose (N,0), then (N,0,0) = I . Thus the payoffs to the two types of incumbents from choosing (N,0) are  (0) + ( I)  (0) and (0,0) + G( I)  (0,0). The maximum payoffs that the two types of incumbents could get if they deviated are ( 1)) and * ( 1)), Rs), respectively. Equation (8) therefore guarantees that deviation is not worthwhile.

PROPOSITION 4. The optimal reelection rule induces the incumbent to behave efficiently.

Proof: Let {( ( 0), ( 0)), ( ( 1), ( 1))} be the incumbent’s first- period choices induced by the optimal reelection rule. If the incumbent were not behaving efficiently, then there are two possibilities. The first is that ( 0) = ( 1) = , so that the project is overprovided. The second is that ( 0 ) = , so that the project is overprovided. We shall rule out each of these two possibilities.

Suppose that first ( 0) = ( 1) = . We may assume without loss of generality that ( 0) = ( 1).

If ( 0)   ( 1), it must be the case that

  ( 0), ( 0))

= ( *(0, 0).

Consequently, if ), the incumbent could be induced to always select (  by setting     ), 0) equal to zero. Let denote common value of the cash transfer. Assumption 1 and the fact that the incumbent is induced to select when imply that

*(0, 0) ) *(0,0),

where  . Now select any   and    such that

* *  

The citizen can induce the incumbent to select when and  when by promising to reelect him with probability if he chooses (N, T), probability  if he chooses, and probability zero otherwise. Since , this dominates the incumbent’s choice of in both states. We conclude therefore that the optimal reelection rule cannot be such as to induce the incumbent to underprovide the project.

   Now suppose that  . Note first that assumptions 2 and 3 imply that the citizen can induce the incumbent to select (P, 0) in each state by simply promising not to reelect him if he does anything else. Thus we may assume with no loss of generality that . For each let T (  .  Then, By part ii of assumption 1, for sufficiently small .

                                 

                                                                         ) .

For such an , the citizen can induce the incumbent to select (N, T ( ) when  and (P, 0) when by promising to reelect him with probability one if he chooses (N, T ( ) or (P, 0) and probability zero otherwise. Since  , this dominates the incumbent’s choice of (P, 0) in both states. Thus the optimal reelection rule cannot be such as to induce the politician to overprovide the project.

 

IV.   Application

It is clear that there be both policy and politician uncertainty. Without the latter, the incumbent would have no reason to worry about his reputation. The writers in the Virginia focus on the role of imperfect information about the effects of policies in generating inefficiencies. This raises the question of whether the assumption of politician uncertainty is superfluous.

At the time of the election, if both incumbent and challenger are bad, the citizen will be indifferent as to which one wins. Thus, if (D,T,B) denotes the citizen’s reelection rule (i.e., the probability that the incumbent is reelected when his first-period record is (D,T,B), any specification of   (.) is consistent with optimizing behavior on the part of the citizen.

The reelection rule employed by the citizen does influence the incumbent’s first-period choices and hence the citizen’s ex ante payoff. The reelection rule used in this equilibrium as the optimal reelection rule.

If there were no policy uncertainty (i.e., the citizen could observe the realization of ), then, under assumption 3, the incumbent could be induced to choose (N,0) when  = 0 and (P,0) when  = 1 by a reelection rule that promises not to reelect him if he does anything else. If the reelection rule promises to reelect the incumbent if and only if he selects (N,0) or (P,0). Then, under assumption 2, the incumbent will choose to implement the project when  = 0 , thereby making inefficient transfers

The ‘public project’ in our model has four key features. First, it indirectly benefits a special interest. Second, it may or may not benefit the rest of society. Third, citizens have less information about whether it will benefit them than politicians do. Fourth, citizens cannot perfectly observe whether its implementation was in their interest even ex post because its outcome is stochastic. The logic of our argument suggests that any policy that shares these four features may be used to redistribute even when cash transfers are both feasible and more efficient. The first feature implies that the policy can be used to transfer resources to special interests. The remaining features imply that the reputational penalty for using the policy to make transfers may be less than that for making direct cash transfers. By the second feature, even good politicians will implement the policy under some conditions, and by the third and fourth features, the citizens cannot observe whether these conditions are satisfied. Almost all public expenditure projects have these four features.

Subsidy or regulatory policies that purport to be in the public interest sometimes have these features. The assumption of heterogeneity in politicians’ tastes is critical to the inefficiency result. The model does not suggest why politicians should be of two different types. It would certainly be more satisfying theoretically to model the process by which individuals become politicians, we do not believe that the assumption of politician heterogeneity is unreasonable. The model is trying to capture here is differences in honesty and integrity.

A second criticism concerns the limited number of policy instruments available to the politician. In reality, there may exist instruments that a good politician could use to separate himself from a bad politician when he introduces a project.

In reality, however, citizens are likely to be highly uncertain (both ex ante and ex post) about the extent to which a special interest gains from a particular public policy. Thus a bad politician might choose to implement a project and impose no taxes, denying that the special interest was gaining significantly. Provided that there is some probability that this action would also be taken by a good politician, the reputation penalty for doing it will be smaller than that for making cash transfers. A more fundamental criticism concerns the limited notion of political competition implicit in this type of model. In particular, the role played by challenger is entirely passive. Thus while individual voters would have no incentive to invest resources to find out whether a particular policy was in the public interest, it would pay the challenger to find out this information and inform the voters. In the context of our model, the challenger would find out the realization of  and expose the incumbent if he had introduced the project when . This would make the reputational penalty for implementing the project identical to that from using cash transfers. If the voters believed what the challenger told them, then the challenger would have an incentive to inform the voters that the project was unwarranted whenever the incumbent introduced it. Thus there is no reason why the voters should believe the information provided by the challenger. Thus the reputational penalty for undertaking the project would still be less than from direct cash transfers even if the challenger could provide information.

 

  V.   Conclusion

We have analyzed the form of transfers in a model of political competition in which politicians have financial incentives to make transfers to a special interest and voters are imperfectly informed. When there is asymmetric information about both the effects of policy and the predispositions of politicians, inefficient methods of redistribution may be employed. This reflects the fact that even politicians who do not pander to special interest will sometimes introduce projects. In characterizing the common features of such policies, we have refined and clarified Tullock’s notion of a disguised transfer mechanism. However, we have also pointed out that our model suggests that politician uncertainty is necessary to explain the use of such mechanism. The mere existence of disguised transfer mechanisms does not undermine the Chicago view. This analysis suggests that the key to understanding the use of disguised transfers mechanisms is to recognize that politicians are concerned with protecting their reputations. 

                                      

     

 


Kindness is Airborne

            Many a times, it's found that we don't understand the people's problems with our naked eyes. Just raise your eyes an...