Federalism and the Soft Budget Constraint

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Abstract

The government's incentives to bail out inefficient projects are determined by the trade-off between political benefits and economic costs, the latter depending on the decentralization of government. Two effects of federalism are derived: First, fiscal competition among local governments under factor mobility increases the opportunity costs of bailout and thus serves as a commitment device (the "competition effect"). Second, monetary centralization, together with fiscal decentralization, induces a conflict of interests and thus may harden budget constrains and reduce inflation (the "checks and balance effect"). Our analysis is used to interpret China's recent experience of transition to a market economy. (JEL E62, E63, H7, L30, P3).

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APA

Qian, Y., & Roland, G. (1998). Federalism and the Soft Budget Constraint. American Economic Review, 88(5), 1143–1162. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.149988

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