Can budget institutions counteract political indiscipline?

Author (Person) ,
Series Title
Series Details No.48, October 2006, p689-739
Publication Date October 2006
ISSN 0266-4658
Content Type

Abstract:

The budget is an expression of political rather than economic priorities. The authors confirm this proposition for a group of new and potential members of the European Union, finding that politics dominates. The contemporary practice of democracy can increase budget deficits through not only ideological preferences, but also more fragmented government coalitions and higher voter participation. Long-term structural forces, triggered by societal divisions and representative electoral rules, have more ambiguous implications but also appear to increase budget pressures, as others have also found. However, the most robust, and hopeful, finding is that budget institutions – mechanisms and rules of the budget process – that create checks and balances have significant value in curbing fiscal pressures even when the politics is representative but undisciplined, and when long-term structural forces are unfavourable.

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