Electoral Intermediaries

Authors
Gallego, Jorge
Li, Christopher
Wantchekon, Leonard
Editor
Publication date
2020-05-29
Document language
eng
Publisher
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Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Democratic elections increasingly involve political intermediaries (e.g. grassroots organizations or political brokers). We develop a model of electoral competition in which candidates must decide between brokers (patronage) and grassroots organizations. Our model shows that patronage is more likely when public offices are relatively more “valuable” for brokers. Moreover, setups that constrain candidates from funding grassroots campaigns and weaken ties between politicians and citizens make patronage more likely. We show that patronage negatively affects citizens’ welfare, as winning brokers turned civil servants undermine the quality of governments. Finally, our model explores the role of policy deliberation in curbing patronage politics.
Description
Códigos JEL
D70 - Analysis of Collective Decision-Making: General, D72 - Political Processes: Rent-Seeking, Lobbying, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior
item.page.subjectjelspa
Keywords
Patronage, Intermediaries, Clientelism, Elections







