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Why Government Succeeds & Why It Fails

Why Government Succeeds & Why It Fails

Authors
Publisher Harvard University Press
Year 01/02/2005
Pages 224
Version paperback
Language English
ISBN 9780674015890
Categories Central government policies
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Book description

Glazer argues that the U.S. government's ability to implement policies is strongly affected by economic constraints, such as their credibility, the level of government commitment, the extent to which firms and consumers rationally anticipate their effects, and whether policy success encourages firms and individuals to behave in intended ways.

Why Government Succeeds & Why It Fails

Table of contents

Acknowledgments Introduction: Public Policy-Limits and Possibilities How Economics Interacts with Politics Structure of Analysis Conceptual Apparatus: Economic Constraints What Makes Problems Soluble? 1. Macroeconomics: Can Government Control the Economy? Managing the Economy: Partisan Incentives and Political Cycles Monetary Policy and Rational Expectations Fiscal Policy-Is It Just Crowding Out? Exhortation: Persuasion and the Art of Equilibrium Selection Spending, Taxes, and Expectations: Budget Deficits as Policy Instruments Can Government Control the Economy? 2. Redistribution: A Success Story? Economic Constraints and Redistribution Uncertainty and Redistribution: Data Government Commitment to Future Redistribution Implications for Redistribution Effectiveness of Redistributive Policy Why Not Taxes? Conclusions: Redistributive Possibilities 3. When Can Government Regulate? The Scope of Regulation Regulating Firms: Possibilities and Pitfalls Regulating Consumer Behavior Conditions for Regulatory Success 4. Producing Goods and Services: Getting the Right Mix What Is Production? Crowding Out Private Provision Credibility as an Obstacle to Inducing Production Credibility as an Obstacle to Restricting Production Production Is Difficult 5. Economic Constraints and Political Institutions Divided Government and the Politics of Gridlock Federalism and the Devolution of Authority Political and Policy Reform What Do Politicians Know? Institutional Design and Policy Effectiveness 6. Final Thoughts What Can Government Do? Five Lessons Conclusions: The Burden of Government Notes References Index

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