Political Risk Aversion

This paper studies the effect of individual uncertainty on collective decision-making to implement innovation. We show how individual uncertainty creates a bias for the status quo even under irreversible voting decisions, in contrast with Fernandez and Rodrik (1991). Blocking innovation is rooted in the aversion to the potential loss of political clout in future voting decisions. Thus, risk neutral individuals exhibit what we call political risk aversion. Yet individual uncertainty is not all bad news as it may open the door to institutional reform. We endogenize institutional reform and show a non-monotonic relationship between institutional efficiency and the size of innovation.
Publication date: September 2009
ISBN: 9781451873412
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Individual uncertainty , Innovation , Dynamic voting , Institutional reform , , new technology , technology choice , institutional reform , investors , expropriation , Criteria for Decision-Making under Risk and Uncertainty

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