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Asymmetric information and agenda control: The bases of monopoly power in public spending
Authors:Radu Filimon  Thomas Romer  Howard Rosenthal
Institution:Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118, USA;GSIA, Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA
Abstract:A pervasive empirical finding, widely known as the ‘flypaper effect’, is that lump-sum intergovernmental grants generate considerably greater public spending by the recipient jurisdiction than would be predicted by equivalent shifts in personal income in that jurisdiction. Moreover, such observations are inconsistent with standard median voter models of the political process. We posit a model in which it is in the interest of suppliers of a collectively provided good not to generate full information to voters about outside aid. The empirical results are consistent with ‘flypaper’ and suggest that voters are very poorly informed about outside grants.
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