diff --git a/research.html b/research.html index 1237ac9..8d2fd09 100644 --- a/research.html +++ b/research.html @@ -487,21 +487,25 @@


  • -Bureaucratic Sabotage and Policy Inefficiency
    with +Bureaucratic Resistance and Policy Inefficiency
    with Kun Heo
    -Abstract: Poor public service provision creates electoral +Abstract: Poor public service provision creates an electoral vulnerability for incumbent politicians. Under what conditions can bureaucrats exploit this to avoid reforms they dislike? We develop a -model of political accountability in which a politician must decide -whether to enact a reform of uncertain value, and a voter evaluates the -incumbent based on government service quality, which anti-reform -bureaucrats can sabotage. We find that bureaucratic sabotage leads to -two types of policy inefficiency depending on voters’ perceptions of the -reform’s merit. Sabotage either deters politicians from enacting -beneficial reforms due to electoral risks (under-reform) or prompts them -to implement excessive reforms by providing bureaucrats as a scapegoat -(over-reform). This result arises because obfuscation by sabotage -affects voter inference differently based on their prior beliefs.
    +model of electoral politics in which a politician must decide whether to +enact a reform of uncertain value, and a voter evaluates the incumbent +based on government service quality, which anti-reform bureaucrats can +undermine. We show that bureaucrats are most incentivized to disrupt +service provision for political leverage when voters are torn between +the reform and the status quo, leading them to interpret poor service +provision as informative of the reform’s merit. We also find that +resistance deters politicians from enacting unpopular reforms due to +electoral risks and prompts them to implement popular reforms by +providing bureaucrats as scapegoats. For intermediary values of reform +popularity, resistance causes accountability loss by preventing +beneficial reforms and inducing ineffective reforms. Our model sheds +light on a unique source of political power for bureaucrats and its +consequences for public policy.
    pdf diff --git a/research.md b/research.md index 517f469..66a1102 100644 --- a/research.md +++ b/research.md @@ -37,9 +37,9 @@ layout: page

  • - Bureaucratic Sabotage and Policy Inefficiency
    + Bureaucratic Resistance and Policy Inefficiency
    with
    Kun Heo
    - Abstract: Poor public service provision creates electoral vulnerability for incumbent politicians. Under what conditions can bureaucrats exploit this to avoid reforms they dislike? We develop a model of political accountability in which a politician must decide whether to enact a reform of uncertain value, and a voter evaluates the incumbent based on government service quality, which anti-reform bureaucrats can sabotage. We find that bureaucratic sabotage leads to two types of policy inefficiency depending on voters' perceptions of the reform's merit. Sabotage either deters politicians from enacting beneficial reforms due to electoral risks (under-reform) or prompts them to implement excessive reforms by providing bureaucrats as a scapegoat (over-reform). This result arises because obfuscation by sabotage affects voter inference differently based on their prior beliefs.
    + Abstract: Poor public service provision creates an electoral vulnerability for incumbent politicians. Under what conditions can bureaucrats exploit this to avoid reforms they dislike? We develop a model of electoral politics in which a politician must decide whether to enact a reform of uncertain value, and a voter evaluates the incumbent based on government service quality, which anti-reform bureaucrats can undermine. We show that bureaucrats are most incentivized to disrupt service provision for political leverage when voters are torn between the reform and the status quo, leading them to interpret poor service provision as informative of the reform's merit. We also find that resistance deters politicians from enacting unpopular reforms due to electoral risks and prompts them to implement popular reforms by providing bureaucrats as scapegoats. For intermediary values of reform popularity, resistance causes accountability loss by preventing beneficial reforms and inducing ineffective reforms. Our model sheds light on a unique source of political power for bureaucrats and its consequences for public policy.
    pdf

  • diff --git a/research/bureaucraticsabotage.pdf b/research/bureaucraticsabotage.pdf index d83999b..cc37675 100644 Binary files a/research/bureaucraticsabotage.pdf and b/research/bureaucraticsabotage.pdf differ