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Spending to Win
Political Institutions, Economic Geography, and Government Subsidies

Explores how political institutions and economic geography interact to shape governments' policy decisions, particularly with respect to subsidies.

Stephanie J. Rickard (Author)

9781108422321, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 19 April 2018

260 pages, 10 b/w illus. 14 tables
23.5 x 15.7 x 2 cm, 0.49 kg

'Rickard's book provides a clear and compelling theory of subsidies to special interests across the world's wealthy democracies. Its account of how electoral institutions interact with geographic dispersion of industries is at once simple and powerful. The study makes a particularly important contribution to our understanding of economic policies directed to special interests in systems of proportional representation.' Miriam Golden, University of California, Los Angeles

Governments in some democracies target economic policies, like industrial subsidies, to small groups at the expense of many. Why do some governments redistribute more narrowly than others? Their willingness to selectively target economic benefits, like subsidies to businesses, depends on the way politicians are elected and the geographic distribution of economic activities. Based on interviews with government ministers and bureaucrats, as well as parliamentary records, industry publications, local media coverage, and new quantitative data, Spending to Win: Political Institutions, Economic Geography, and Government Subsidies demonstrates that government policy-making can be explained by the combination of electoral institutions and economic geography. Specifically, it shows how institutions interact with economic geography to influence countries' economic policies and international economic relations. Identical institutions have wide-ranging effects depending on the context in which they operate. No single institution is a panacea for issues, such as income inequality, international economic conflict, or minority representation.

Tables
Figures
Acknowledgements
1. Who gets what and why? The politics of particularistic economic policies
2. The uneven geographic dispersion of economic activity
3. How institutions and geography work together to shape policy
4. Explaining government spending on industrial subsidies
5. The power of producers: successful demands for state aid
6. Why institutional differences among proportional representation systems matter
7. The policy effects of electoral competitiveness in closed-list PR
8. Conclusion and implications
References
Index.

Subject Areas: Economic systems & structures [KCS], Political economy [KCP], Comparative politics [JPB]

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