Dynamic Incentives and the Optimal Delegation of Political Power

This paper proposes a theory to explain why a politician delegates policy tasks to a technocrat in an independent institution. It formalizes the rationales for delegation highlighted by Hamilton (1788) and by Blinder (1998). Delegation trades-off the cost of having a possibly incompetent technocrat with a long-term job contract against the benefit of having a technocrat who (i) invests more effort into the specialized policy task and (ii) is better insulated from the whims of public opinion. One natural application of the theory is in the field of monetary policy where the model provides a new theory of central bank independence.
Publication date: April 2007
ISBN: 9781451866551
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Topics covered in this book

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Political Process- General , Delegation , Elections , Career Concerns , Learning-by-doing , Insulation , public opinion , inflation , central bank , monetary policy , political economy , Structure , Scope , and Performance of Government , Public Sector Labor Markets

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