Government Spending, Legislature Size, and the Executive Veto

Recent work on the political economy of fiscal policy has asked how budgetary institutions affect fiscal outcomes. But what determines the budgetary institutions? In this paper I consider one such institution: the executive veto. A simple theoretical framework predicts that jurisdictions with more political actors spending from a common pool of tax resources will choose to empower their executives. Using an econometric framework to identify the exogenous variation in the number of districts, I present evidence from a cross-section of local governments in the United States that jurisdictions with more electoral districts are likely to have executives with veto powers.
Publication date: December 2001
ISBN: 9781451874709
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Economics- Macroeconomics , Economics- Macroeconomics , political institutions , executive veto , probability , statistics , equation , correlation , Analysis Of Collective Decision-making , Macroeconomic - Aspects Of Public Finance , Macroeconomic Policy , And General Outlook , structure And Scope Of Government , fiscal Policies A

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