Publisher:
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Issued date:
2018-04-28
Citation:
Artés, J., & Jurado, I. (2018). Government fragmentation and fiscal deficits: a regression discontinuity approach. In Public Choice, 175(3–4), 367–391
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Sponsor:
We would like to thank Albert Falcó-Gimeno, Elias Dinas, Sandra León, Jeffrey Timmons,
Didac Queralt, Pedro Riera, and Gilles Serra for helpful comments on previous drafts of this paper.
We are grateful to the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness for financial support through
Grants CSO2013-40870-R, and CSO2017-82881-R.
Project:
Gobierno de España. CSO2013-40870-R Gobierno de España. CSO2017-82881-R
Some electoral systems favor strong single-party majority governments, while
others the formation of coalitions. Having one or the other is likely to affect economic outcomes
in ways that are unintended when the electoral rules are approved. In this paper, wSome electoral systems favor strong single-party majority governments, while
others the formation of coalitions. Having one or the other is likely to affect economic outcomes
in ways that are unintended when the electoral rules are approved. In this paper, we
show that government fragmentation has large fiscal implications. We also provide results
that have a causal interpretation. Using a panel of Spanish municipalities, along with a
close-elections regression discontinuity design, we find that single-party majorities run
budgets with a 1.5% point larger primary surplus than that of coalitions. In addition, we
show that lower deficits are driven mainly by single-party majority governments’ capacity
to raise more revenues. These findings are robust to several model specifications.[+][-]