WPS8213 Policy Research Working Paper 8213 Demand and Supply Curves in Political Markets Understanding the Problem of Public Goods and Why Governments Fail Them Stuti Khemani Development Research Group Macroeconomics and Growth Team October 2017 Policy Research Working Paper 8213 Abstract This paper brings the economic tools of demand and supply the selection of a point on the political demand curve by curves to better understand how political markets shape oligopolistic political competition. Further, it shows how the selection of government policies. It does so to tackle a elite capture is only one of many possible outcomes, and is problem at the intersection of political science and econom- endogenous to preferences and beliefs in society. Preferences ics: government failure to pursue policies on the basis of in society for public goods (or the lack thereof ), and beliefs sound technical evidence. Too often, the leaders who wield about how others are behaving in the public sector, are the policy-making power within governments deliberately and primitive or fundamental elements driving the shapes of knowingly ignore sound technical advice, or are unable to political demand and supply curves and thence the selection pursue it despite the best of intentions, because of political of public policies and institutions. This framework highlights constraints. The paper shows how the prevailing dominant the need for future research to understand where political explanation for suboptimal policies and weak institutions, preferences and beliefs come from, which is essential to the of special interest and elite capture, can be understood as design of institutions that address problems of public goods. This paper is a product of the Macroeconomics and Growth Team, Development Research Group. It is part of a larger effort by the World Bank to provide open access to its research and make a contribution to development policy discussions around the world. Policy Research Working Papers are also posted on the Web at http://econ.worldbank.org. The author may be contacted at skhemani@worldbank.org. The Policy Research Working Paper Series disseminates the findings of work in progress to encourage the exchange of ideas about development issues. An objective of the series is to get the findings out quickly, even if the presentations are less than fully polished. The papers carry the names of the authors and should be cited accordingly. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the authors. They do not necessarily represent the views of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/World Bank and its affiliated organizations, or those of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent. Produced by the Research Support Team Demand and Supply Curves in Political Markets: Understanding the Problem of Public Goods and Why Governments Fail Them Stuti Khemani1 World Bank JEL classification codes: H1, H41, H7, E1, Keywords: public goods; political economy; institutions; norms; preferences 1 This paper has been invited by Ben Ross Schneider and Melani Cammett, Editors of the Cambridge Elements Series on the Politics of Development. I thank Melani Cammett and Luis Serven for really helpful comments on the first drafts, and Maya Eden and Rafael Martinez for discussion that helped to clarify the ideas in this paper. I thank Swati Raychaudhuri for assistance with the figures and tables. The opinions expressed here are those of the author and need not coincide with those of the World Bank or its Executive Directors. “The reader may wonder why we [economists] do not just pack up and become sociologists. The answer, we think, is that the distinctive strengths of economics—explaining prices and quantities, as well as exploring the complex and often unexpected ways that countless uncoordinated actions generate sometimes unanticipated aggregate outcomes and dynamics—is no less relevant today than when it was pioneered by the classical economists two centuries ago.” (Bowles and Gintis, 2000, pp 1433). This paper brings the economic tools of demand and supply curves to better understand how political markets shape the selection of government policies. It does so to tackle a problem at the intersection of political science and economics: government failure to pursue policies on the basis of sound technical evidence. Too often, the leaders who wield policy-making power within governments deliberately and knowingly ignore sound technical advice, or are unable to pursue it despite the best of intentions, because of political constraints (World Bank, 2016). Simply put, government failure can be described as: “bad policies can be good politics” and vice versa, that “good policies can be bad politics” (Vicente and Wantchekon, 2009; Bueno de Mesquita et al, 2003). “Good” and “bad” policies are examined in this paper on the basis of economic models of the role of governments, or the public sector, in addressing market failures, promoting prosperity, eradicating poverty, and providing the public goods that contribute to society’s wellbeing. The central question regarding policy choices, which is common to both economics and political science, is whether politics yields policies in the broad public interest rather than being captured to serve narrow special interests. The paper develops a new analytical framework which synthesizes a complex body of multidisciplinary research on this question, and distills a few fundamental features that matter for whether governments pursue policies more, or less, in the public interest. The consolidated approach to political markets offered in this paper is one which hones in on how politics matters for the selection of economic policies by governments. The political market examined in this paper is one in which actors on the demand-side are separated from the supply-side on the basis of the degree of direct power they exercise over public policy. Demand side actors are the countless “ordinary” citizens, who are not well organized, who hold no powerful positions, nor command significant economic resources, and exert little direct influence over policy- making. Supply-side actors consist of that sub-set of citizens who select into government bureaucracy and political contestation for power—for leadership positions in government or as organized groups that exert direct influence over leaders and policy-making. The analogy to economic markets is the selection of individuals into being consumers, or “takers” of public policy, versus producers, who “make” public policy, exercising direct power over what government agencies and authorities do.2 The actors on the supply-side are also citizens, but distinguished from citizens on the demand-side by having the power to make policy. 2 One concern raised upfront by a reviewer is whether there is a problem with limiting the framework to a two-actor world—on the demand and supply sides. The paper will show how this is not the case. The shape of the demand and supply curves in political markets that are proposed in this paper reflect complex variation among individuals in their preferences, and the different types of political actions individuals can take on the supply-side. However, the framework abstracts from the details of these different types of political actions to hone in on how they are aggregated by political markets and translated into policy outcomes. 2 The development of this framework is timed to coincide with global forces that are making political markets look much more like “countless uncoordinated actions” (Bowles and Gintis, ibid) than ever before, necessitating more tools to understand how these actions aggregate into outcomes, and the dynamics of these outcomes. More and more ordinary citizens are participating in political processes around the world (World Bank, 2016). These citizens are not only queuing at voting booths or taking to the streets, but they are also contesting on the supply-side for local leadership positions, with the spread of local elections and decentralization of public policy delivery within countries across the political spectrum. In more and more places around the world, the power to make public policy, including through how policy is de-facto implemented, is less and less restricted to a small group of organized elites, but rather dispersed across a larger number of actors in leadership positions. The framework offered here takes-on the analysis of how individual political actions, and the threat thereof, of large numbers of citizens, on both the demand and supply sides, aggregate into outcomes of public policy. Political markets determine the allocation of resources to public goods. In contrast to the availability of a well developed framework in economics to think about how economic markets allocate resources to private goods, there is no general framework available in the social sciences to think about the market for public goods. Questions about the nature of public goods that matter for human wellbeing and economic development, how society allocates resources towards these goods, and how to think about whether these allocations are “sufficient” or “optimal” are falling through the cracks between disciplines in the social sciences. While important advances have been made to answer these questions, I posit that a more general framework is needed that can encompass or bring together dispersed pieces of individual research. This paper is a first attempt to provide such a general framework by extending the methodology of demand and supply curves in economics to examine how political markets allocate resources to public goods. At the same time as offering something of value from economics, namely, the application of demand and supply curves, the paper confronts perhaps its biggest shortcoming: of assuming exogenous preferences. It focuses on this shortcoming particularly in the context of preferences for public goods, and attitudes towards the role of government in an economy, and shows how these are the crucial ingredients shaping the political market. It seeks to learn from political science and other disciplines about how collective or social preferences are formed for public goods, and the role of endogenizing preferences to understand equilibrium outcomes of political markets. Economists have grown recent interest in questions of culture—values and beliefs—which are closely linked to preferences; how culture interacts with formal institutions, and how these shape economic outcomes (Alesina and Giuliano, 2015, provide a review). However, this is a nascent body of work which has yet to clarify concepts, and to distinguish between channels through which values and beliefs impact outcomes. A key distinction is whether culture matters through interaction among people in private markets or through political markets that shape public policies. In this paper, I focus on the latter channel—how values and beliefs shape political markets—and summarize what we may know and what are large, open questions for future research. In the framework of demand and supply curves in political markets in this paper, the fundamental element driving public policy outcomes, and government failures to pursue public goods, is: preferences across citizens over public goods. Preferences over public goods can be understood as values and beliefs 3 about the role of government in the economy and society—what types of problems governments should be addressing through public policy, or what types of goods and services governments should be providing. These preferences shape citizen participation on both sides of the market—as “takers” of public policy on the demand side, and as “makers” of public policy on the supply side. Preferences over public goods determine which citizens enter the supply-side, contending for positions of political and bureaucratic leadership, and organizing into groups to actively exert pressure on policies. Preferences therefore shape policy outcomes through both the demand-side mechanisms of how popular support (or opposition) determine incentives of policy-making leaders, as well as through the supply-side mechanisms of who selects to become contenders for policy-making powers, and on what basis they compete with each other. The paper shows how policy outcomes across a variety of formal and informal political institutions that determine who has power over policy-making can be understood as the intersection of different shapes of demand and supply curves. Using this general framework thus allows for focusing on the characteristics of public policies—summarized into an index of private versus public interest outcomes—that come out of a diversity of political institutions for gaining and remaining in power. In the last section of the paper, after defining the framework of demand and supply curves in political markets, I argue that we know very little about which types of formal institutions of power configuration (such as democracy, autocracy, federalism, etc.) are more or less conducive to getting more public (less private) goods from the public sector. I discuss how the existing evidence supports my argument that preferences for public goods, and beliefs about how others are participating in politics, are of first order importance within any institutional context, shaping both the demand-side—what citizens are willing to support before becoming more politically active, that is, moving to the supply-side—entering the market of contenders for policy-making powers. For example, some autocracies can outperform democracies, while others are disastrous. This variation between good policy outcomes in some autocracies and bad policies in some democracies can be explained not by differences in formal institutions of elections, but rather, by differences in behavior within institutions that are ultimately attributable to different preferences and beliefs among citizens. Fundamental questions about political markets loom large for all types of countries, rich and poor, going well beyond things like voting behavior, or outcomes of elections, to how citizens form preferences over public goods, and the critical role of how they access information and use it to form beliefs about what the state or government should be doing. How do citizens find common ground to demand broad public goods that benefit society as a whole? What role do formal institutions play in shaping citizens’ values and beliefs with regard to the role of governments in providing public goods? What are the characteristics of informal institutions that shape these values and beliefs? This paper provides a new framework, drawing upon vast areas of literature, to tackle these broad questions, and shows how central these questions are to research and policy efforts to understand and solve problems of public goods. I further argue that this new framework is useful to understand how transitions happen from one type of “low level” equilibrium, such as of clientelist or patronage politics where public policies are more likely to be geared to provide private benefits rather than broad public goods, to a better equilibrium, such as where public goods are provided by depoliticized and professional bureaucracies. Transition from an old to a new equilibrium can come about through changes in either the citizen demand-side of political 4 markets or on the supply-side, through policies selected by political leaders, or both, but without a structured framework or tools to examine these forces separately, we have limited ability to analyze the dynamics of a transition. Most scholars acknowledge that little is known about how societies with initially weak institutions, of bureaucracy and the rule of law, move towards strengthening them so they cannot be easily bent to the will or discretion of powerful political elites. What little research is available relies on historical accounts of institutional transition in the United Kingdom and the United States. The insights from competing papers on what explains these transitions can be reconciled and consistently interpreted within the framework offered in this paper. For example, Acemoglu and Robinson (2000) argue that the transition to democratic institutions in England in the 1800s was the result of underlying threat of revolution by citizens on the demand-side. However, Lizzeri and Persico (2004) argue that demand-side explanations are insufficient to expain the political reforms, and should be complemented by another of increasing preferences among some elites for urban public health goods following the industrial revolution. Preferences for public goods among citizens—both as voters on the demand-side and as elites who actively influence or become contenders on the supply-side—have also been credited as underlying the so-called Progressive Era in the 20th century United States during which professionalism in bureaucracies became established (Glaeser and Goldin, 2006). I discuss how these different accounts of institutional transition can be interpreted as changes in the shape (or slope and elasticity) of demand and supply curves in political markets. The paper is organized as follows. Section I provides a discussion of the problem that is the objective of this analysis: the problem of public goods and government failure to address it. Section II presents the framework for the demand and supply sides of political markets, and discusses how to interpret policy selection in equilibrium. Section III applies this framework to explaining government failures to pursue public goods. Given the importance of preferences and beliefs in shaping the demand and supply curves in political markets, Section IV forges connections between key pieces of available evidence to examine what we know about the formation of these preferences and beliefs. The experience of citizen engagement through local political markets, the messages communicated through local media, and the learning of concepts and ideas in schools appear to play fundamental roles in shaping political preferences and beliefs, but with many open questions on which future research is needed. Section V concludes. I. The Problem of Public Goods and Government Failure Markets are the domain of economic transactions among large numbers of people. Governments attempt to control the freedom of private individuals and groups to engage in market transactions by exercising the powers of authority and coercion of the state. Modern economics analyzes how markets function and aims to identify regularities or patterns in what outcomes are obtained through the interaction among large numbers of dispersed agents. A durable result from this analysis is that when markets are competitive, property rights are well defined, contracts can be enforced, and transactions between agents are not too costly, good economic outcomes of rising incomes and prosperity are likely to be obtained. Furthermore, a related result in economics is that the outcomes produced by competitive markets would be difficult for a central planner in government to replicate through instruments of state policy and 5 suppression of markets. The domain of “good” economic policy making by governments is derived as supporting competitive conditions in markets, and providing the public goods that markets do not.3 Economics is most confident about its results about markets when it comes to the allocation of resources to the consumption and production of private goods—goods from which individuals derive utility and that have little direct implications for the utility of others. Economics recognizes the limits of markets to achieve good outcomes when there are problems of externalities and public goods—when the consumption of a good by one individual has direct implications for the ultility of others. Elementary economics textbooks present the notion of market failures, externalities and public goods which are problems that require some form of public policy intervention by governments. The “optimal” policy is typically derived by assuming the position of a benevolent social planner to analyze the characteristics of the problem and the potential impact of different policy instruments. For example, take the case of the negative externality (for environmental quality) of pollution generated during the production process of firms, such as oil refineries. Policy makers in government can choose between “command and control” regulation which specifies the quantity of pollution that each firm is allowed to produce; price regulation through the imposition of Pigouvian taxes on the production of pollution; or, allocate “pollution permits” (the cap and trade policy) to firms and thence allow market forces to determine who produces how much pollution. The third solution follows the insights of Coase (1960) on how to secure property rights and well-functioning markets in which different agents can costlessly negotiate with each other, calls for light policy interventions by governments to facilitate market-led solutions. Yet, even the so-called Coase Theorem, which minimizes the role of government, does not get rid of it—government institutions are needed to protect property rights, reduce transactions costs, support free markets and gently nudge these markets when they fail (as in the case of the pollution externality). Governments are not only uniquely positioned to provide the institutional infrastructure for well- functioning markets, but also to pursue public goods that society values and that are likely to be under- provided by markets. For example, for those who seek to eradicate poverty and reduce inequality, governments also have unique powers of redistribution to complement other market-based solutions to raise living standards for all. Supporting market institutions can also be regarded as a public good, and some forms of redistribution, such as providing social safety nets, can be viewed as part of this public good. For example, by cushioning people from shocks, public insurance programs may help prevent populist backlash against markets. Redistribution may also help maintain competitive conditions in markets by reducing the likelihood that unequal endowments of wealth lead to the creation of monopolies by the wealthy.4 The notion of “public goods” that governments can uniquely provide (or nudge markets to provide) is broader than the textbook definition of those goods that have the physical properties of being “non- excludable” and “non-rival” (clean air and national defense are typical textbook examples of public goods, although one could think of ways in which even these can be excludable and rival). Many types of public spending may be regarded as providing public goods even though at first glance they would 3 Rajan and Zingales (2003) provide a most spirited account of the economists’ view of the importance of markets. 4 The concept of redistribution as a public good needs greater attention in the literature. The paper will discuss the challenge of analyzing what are technically sound redistribution policies further below. 6 appear as both “excludable” and “rival”. For example, spending on public education in a neighborhood school excludes residents living in other neighborhoods, and increasing public resource allocation to some schools is likely to rival resources for others. But society and its citizens may have preferences defined over the public good of “equal opportunities for all children, regardless of the accident of their birth”. Providing this good may require an array of unequal public spending policies such as progressive targeting of resources to schools in poor neighborhoods, or providing scholarships and social support to children from disadvantaged families. Solutions to problems of market failures and public goods need not necessarily involve public policies of direct production or provision of services by government departments. Just like in the example of cap and trade regulation of pollution, public policies that aim to accomplish goals of redistribution or equal access to health and education services may provide incentives for markets to provide these services (Pinheiro and Schneider, 2017). This paper will be agnostic about what specific policy design works better than others to accomplish a policy goal. It will pursue the more abstract or meta question of whether society and government seek to address problems of public goods using the best available technical evidence about what policies work for the purpose. Governments fail when its leaders deliberately and knowingly ignore sound technical advice about what public policies work better than others in pursuing public goods. Defining and measuring government failure is difficult because it requires first specifying what are appropriate policies, and what are the public goods that governments should deliver, to then be able to assess whether leaders are failing to pursue those policies and deliver those goods. This paper will follow World Bank (2016) and characterize appropriate public policies in the abstract: as those policies that aim to fulfill the unique role of government to provide the public goods that create value for society but are not adequately provided by markets, debating the best available technical evidence for this purpose. Governments fail when leaders adopt and implement policies that they know are costly for the greater public good, despite the availability of alternative policies that are likely to yield improved outcomes. Governments can make inadvertent mistakes, when they do not have the right evidence, when there is uncertainty and disagreement among experts about the appropriate policies, or when the state of the world changes and they need to find out what to do to tackle new problems as they emerge. Such mistakes and uncertainties about appropriate public policies are not part of the problem of government failure that is tackled in this paper. Government failure is defined on the basis of purpose, intent, and incentives of leaders to pursue public policies in the public interest. One example of government failure on which there appears to be a consensus is that of malfeasance and mismanagement within public bureaucracies and by political leaders: limited control of corruption; weak management practices that condone frequent absenteeism among public sector workers; the role of connections or nepotism in the recruitment and career concerns of public sector workers, which can contribute to lack of motivation to perform on the job; crony capitalism, whereby politically connected firms receive privileged treatment by public regulators and financial markets. The reason there appears to be consensus that corruption is socially costly is because the evidence suggests that where there is greater corruption, public policies confer concentrated private benefits on a few, at the expense of economic efficiency and more widely shared public benefits (World Bank, 2016 and 2017). 7 Another example of government failure on which there appears to be consensus has similar properties of conferring private benefits at the expense of the greater public good: price subsidies for energy. For example, there is technical evidence and wide agreement among experts that energy subsidy policies pursued by many governments around the world are inefficient and entail fiscal and environmental costs with little justification on equity grounds (Clement et al. 2013). Energy subsidies in the developing world are highly regressive (Arze del et al. 2012). In India, a country that exemplifies the political and economic problems around energy pricing policies, estimates suggest that the richest 10 percent of households receive seven times more in benefits from subsidies than the poorest 10 percent (Anand et al. 2013). Furthermore, India is also a country where citizens are actively engaged in outright theft of energy. Depuru et al (2011) estimate that utility companies worldwide lose more than $25 billion every year due to electricity theft, of which utility companies in India lose about $4.5 billion every year. Such theft, and the resultant transmission and distribution losses, combined with pricing policies of subsidizing electricity results in bankrupt utilities that are unable to provide reliable electricity to anyone. Electricity produced by public utilities in India in effect becomes a scarce commodity over which intense distributive conflict is waged through the political process (Golden and Min, 2013). How does the notion of government failure defined here apply to other broad areas of policy-making that have been the subject of voluminous scholarship—market-oriented policies of economic liberalization, on the one hand, and social welfare and redistribution on the other? In the literature on the political economy of macroeconomic reforms, policies such as trade liberalization, privatization, deregulation, and fiscal discipline, are argued by economists to be technically sound policies that would enable economic growth for the benefit of all; failure to pursue these policies, economists warn, would have dire consequences.5 The animating puzzle in that literature is why governments do not adopt these superior economic policies, and why reforms for macroeconomic stabilization are delayed despite all policy actors realizing that adjustments will eventually become necessary (for example, because budget constraints will eventually bind). The notion of government failure defined here is consistent with the dominant theme in that literature: that failure to adopt reforms is the result of conflict of private interests among policy makers and the constituents they serve. That is, policy makers pursue private interests, either their own or of the interest groups to whom they are beholden, even when they understand technical evidence about the costs of delaying reforms.6 When it comes to policies for social welfare and redistribution, there is far less consensus among economists not only about what are technically sound policies, but more fundamentally about how to think about “technical merit”.7 Most analysis by World Bank poverty economists, for example, assumes redistribution as a policy objective and then proceeds with technical analysis of how best to achieve the 5 Krueger (1993), Rodrik (1996) and Sturzenegger and Tommasi (1998) are classic references that review the literature on the political economy of reforms. 6 The leading authors reviewing the literature (cited above) recognize a role for genuine differences in technical opinion about what are appropriate policies, and that some part of lack of reforms is the result of “limited information and the dynamics of learning” (Sturzenegger and Tommasi, 1998, page 8-9). However, they conclude that this limited knowledge factor cannot explain the persistence of bad economic policies without appealing to some role for powerful interest groups who block reforms to maintain their private rents, without regard for the generalized social costs. 7 Consensus on basic macroeconomic stabilization policies is ultimately rooted in binding budget or resource constraints— sustaining fiscal excesses is infeasible. In contrast, redistribution policies are determined by the objectives that are being pursued, and these objectives, rooted in preferences, can vary across citizens and policy-makers. 8 amounts and targets of the specified objective function, such as the World Bank’s own goal of eradicating extreme poverty (World Bank, 2014). A significant literature has examined how differences in preferences for redistribution, such as, based on differing beliefs and philosophies about the role of luck verus effort and individual responsibility in shaping income inequality, is an important factor explaining variation in the size of government, progressive taxation and spending on welfare of poorer households (Alesina and Glaeser, 2004). How relevant, then, is the notion of government failure— leaders pursuing policies that they know are costly for the greater public good, despite the availability of alternative policies that are likely to yield improved outcomes—for the area of redistributive policies, if there is much less evidence or expert consensus on those “alternative policies” or “improved outcomes”? The World Development Report 2006, Equity and Development (World Bank, 2006), marshals evidence to argue that public policies for equitable access to health, education, and economic opportunity are needed for sustained economic growth for all. Put another way, World Bank (2006) provides evidence consistent with equity of opportunity, and avoidance of extreme deprivation by any sub-group of the population, being public goods, in a similar way as protection of property rights, and institutions to support competitive markets. If any policy maker does not agree with the conclusions about the technical value (for sustained economic growth for all) of redistributive policies, and therefore does not pursue those policies, would that be regarded as government failure in the framework of this paper? If the basis for policy disagreement is sustained by credibly non-partisan technical analysis of economic data, it would not. However, if policy making in contentious areas is influenced by incentives of leaders to extract private rents, for themselves or for the interest groups to whom they are beholden, and these leaders deliberately ignore technical evidence on social costs in order to preserve private rents, that constitutes government failure.8 This paper builds on the analysis in World Bank (2016) and characterizes “good” versus “bad” policies as the extent to which policies confer private benefits at the expense of the greater public good. I define a policy index—p—to capture the degree of inequality in the incidence of benefits from public policies, akin to the Gini coefficient for income equality. Like the Gini coefficient, the value of p lies between 0 and 1, with 0 representing perfect equality, when the incidence of benefits from public policies is spread universally, and 1 representing perfect inequality—when the benefits are captured by a small segment of the population. Unlike the Gini coefficient, which reflects inequality in the distribution of a fixed amount of resources, the policy index proposed here reflects a trade-off between allocating public resources to provide private consumption versus investment in a public good that yields greater social returns whose benefits are universally shared. Values of p0 reflect equality in distribution of benefits; but importantly, the origins of these universally shared benefits come from investments in public goods that generate social value. Values of p>0, reflect the opposite, of public spending on private goods, even if they are distributed equally (such as, to continue the earlier example, if subsidized electricity were distributed 8 Outcomes in other areas of contentious policy-making that go beyond economics—such as gun control, or environmental policies to combat climate change—may also be partly explained by knowledge limitations and disagreement based on technical analysis of data. But I would argue that the notion of government failure defined in this paper would nevertheless be relevant. Government failure in these cases would look like the following: despite government leaders having access to expert evidence that points to the benefits of some policy reforms that they can all agree upon, those reforms are not undertaken because the political process becomes gridlocked by partisan considerations. 9 equally across constituents), if these policies come at the expense of public investments that would create greater social value (such as, well functioning, and solvent electric utilities that support economic growth). The social costs of under-investments in public goods (for example, to combat climate change) may be disproportionately borne by poorer sections of the population who have fewer means to insure or protect themselves, bringing this proposed policy index back in line with a measure of inequality. In short, the policy index p captures the cost of distributive conflict over the allocation of public resources, resulting in allocations to serve private interests at the expense of investments in the greater public good, with p=1 representing the highest cost, and p=0, no cost: 0  p 1 (1) This policy index p is the fundamental building block of the analytical framework in this paper. It represents the problem of government failure that is the objective of this analysis—governments fail when their leaders knowingly and deliberately adopt a policy index p for which there is evidence that it confers private benefits at the expense of the greater public good. This is an abstract way of denoting public policies and should not be confused with policies that are in practice designed to confer unequal benefits in the pursuance of a larger public good—such as, in the example raised earlier of unequal spending across public schools, to give equal opportunity to all children regardless of the accident of their birth in poor families, and build human capital for long-term, sustained growth. The approach is one of summarizing policy choices into a single index of “privateness” versus “publicness”, which links to normative concepts in other disciplines, such as in political science, about special interest versus public interest politics. Government failure in this approach is analytically identical to market failure—the failure of trade or negotiation between agents to yield a public sector which provides public goods. Any policy index p>0 is an example of a government failure—there exist public goods that would enhance social welfare but public policies are allocating resources to private rather than public goods because it serves the interests of some citizens. There is no political Coase theorem here because of conflict of interest among citizens who are pursuing their private good through public policies (Acemoglu, 2003). The concept of summarizing policy choices into a single index representing the degree to which policies deviate from the optimal policy of providing public goods can be supported by a general model of an economy which exhibits market failures and requires public goods, such as, property rights and institutions that support competitive markets. The model would need to specify the costs of producing that public good, in terms of foregone private consumption of citizens in that economy, and in terms of the technology of taxation (distortionary and transaction costs associated with taxation). It would yield an “optimal” solution, in the tradition of modern economics, characterized by equating the marginal benefits from the public good with the marginal costs of producing it. This is the so-called Samuelsonian condition, named after the economist who first wrote down such a general model (Samuelson, 1954). The difference in this paper from the Samuelsonian approach consists of how the public good is modeled. Modern economics analysis takes as its starting point a defined welfare or utility function with exogenously given preferences for private consumption, c, and a public good, g. An individual or group j’s utility function can be written (for simplicity’s sake) as the sum of utility from private consumption 10 and the public good (which enters the utility of all other individuals in society since the good, g, is assumed to be non-excludable and non-rival): U j (c, g )  c j  H j ( g ) (2) The marginal benefit of g would then be derived from a social welfare function that sums up the welfare or utilities of all individuals in the society. If C(c, g) denotes the social cost function of producing the public good, the optimal solution would be represented as: ∑ = (3) The problem with this approach is that it does not pay attention to where preferences for public goods come from, how they are endogenously formed by political and economic institutions, and how this matters for economic and human development outcomes (Bowles, 1998; Gintis et al, 2005). The Samuelsonian approach of relying on individual utility functions requires that preferences for public goods have to satisfy particular properties in order to be amenable to analysis through utility functions. Social choice theorists, beginning with Arrow (1965), have cast doubt on the existence of well-behaved preferences over the multiple dimensions of public policy making. The political economy approach of assuming a “median voter”, who has well defined preferences, suffers from the same problem. I further contend that the problem of defining exogenous and stable preferences is particularly severe for public goods, g, than it is for private consumption.9 Public goods, by definition, involve a shared understanding in society about which goods or public policies provide benefits for all, and thereby have the properties of being non-excludable and non-rival. Beliefs about what should be regarded as a public good are not only shaped by the societal institutions that sociology studies, but can also be shaped through game-theoretic interactions between multiple agents (that is studied in political science and political economics). Far from being stable, preferences based on beliefs about how others are thinking and acting may change rapidly. For example, Grossman and Helpman (2001) describe how elites can distort public policy to cater to their own self-interest by persuading ordinary citizens that those policies are in the public interest. Elites’ preferences over public policy in these models of special interest capture may be indistinguishable from their preferences over private consumption, leaving open the question of how to think about preferences for public goods. What the framework here does is separate the origins of differences in opinion over the optimal public policy p between that which is derived on the basis of technical evidence, and that which is shaped by beliefs, ideology, history, norms, and self-interest. The intuition in the examples discussed earlier in this section, that there exists some available “technical” basis about the types of policies governments should be pursuing to create social value, is not consonant with summing-up individual lay citizens’ valuation of policies, nor with the preferences of a “median voter”. Indeed, there are several examples of institutions adopted by society precisely to shield public policy from popular incursions, and place some forms of policy making within the domain of technical experts. For example, monetary policy making by an independent central bank. A large literature on economic reforms has described what technically 9 I cannot think of a formal reference where this distinction has been made, that preferences over public goods, g, is harder to define than preferences over private consumption. I would be grateful for suggestions during the review process. 11 sound public policies should look like, relying on “expert” assessment of whether these policies would contribute to growth (Rodrik, 1996, and 2006 provides reviews). Theoretically, Lizzeri and Persico (2002) provide a model where the public good, G, is given by exogenous assumptions about the technical value of G, and the efficient or optimal policy choice is to allocate all public resources to producing this public good as long as it is more valuable than the cost of foregone private consumption. The approach of assuming a domain of policy solutions that carry some technical merit for the good of society as a whole is a particular way of avoiding the ultimately philosophical question of what is “the public good”. An abstract policy index, p, which denotes deviation from technically sound policies does not obscure the fact that there may be a great deal of uncertainty around what specific policies are contained in the benchmark indicator, p=0. To continue the prior example, Rodrik (2006) discusses significant limitations to expert understanding of good economic reforms. Experts rarely have irrefutable evidence about whether reforms would indeed improve outcomes. But this uncertainty over knowledge of reforms is not the interesting political economy question. At some philosophical level, society will never “know” what options are better than others. The interesting question is whether governments pursue policies on the basis of constructively debating the best available technical evidence and continuously promote the generation of better evidence and more debates to inform policy making. The analysis here will regard citizens’ preferences over p to be endogenously formed by political and economic markets, and shaped by history and social norms. In what follows below, individuals and groups in society will have different preferences over p, and disagreements over the normative, “technical” value of setting p=0. This allows for examining society’s beliefs with regard to an abstract benchmark, p=0, that has some useful properties. This benchmark is consistent with several strands of literature across disciplines that regard public goods as those that confer universal benefits. This characterization is also useful to serve the role of “prices” in political markets—the price of providing more equal benefits from public policies is foregone private consumption, especially among economic elites who hold greater private wealth endowments and incomes that need to be taxed to finance the public good. The next section will develop the demand curve for the policy index p, using this “price” characteristic of foregone private consumption that is unequally distributed across citizens with different endowments/income. II. Demand and Supply Curves in Political Markets The political market examined in this paper is one in which actors on the demand-side are separated from the supply-side on the basis of the degree of direct power they exercise over the setting of public policy, p. Demand side actors are the countless ordinary citizens who hold no public office and exert little direct influence over policy making. Supply-side actors consist of that sub-set of citizens who select into political contestation for power—for leadership positions in government or as organized groups that exert influence over leaders and policy making. The analogy to economic markets is the selection of individuals into being consumers versus producers (Table 1). 12 Table 1: Analogy between Economics and Politics on Roles and Actions of Individuals Demand-side Supply-side Actions Economics Consumers Producers Buy/sell Politics Citizens/users/voters Politicians/bureaucrats/influential Elect or support/run organized groups or apply, organize This section will focus on drawing the demand curve for the public policy index p: D(p). Consider a society with different individuals or groups indexed by j. The welfare of group j’s members is given by: W j (c, b)  c j  b j ( p) (3) where c represents private consumption over which an individual exercises direct decision-making power, while b(p) represents net benefits from public policies after paying any taxes owed to the government under those policies. I propose separating the analysis of the demand and supply sides of political markets on the basis of little versus greater power to manipulate p. To gain power to manipulate p, citizens have to enter the bureaucracy or become political actors and contest as candidates (or organize into parties) or participate as voters and political interest groups on the supply-side of the market. The decision to vote, or how to vote, and protest (or rise in revolt) receive special treatment in this framework, lying at the cusp of the demand and supply sides—these are actions ordinary citizens can threaten to take to indirectly influence policy selection, regardless of whether they in fact vote or revolt. The act of voting or of mobilizing in protest are actions on the supply-side of the political market. The demand curve is proposed as the number of citizens, D(p), who would choose to remain “takers” of a given policy (p), rather than becoming political or bureaucratic actors on the supply side to directly influence or select the policy.10 The demand side thus reflects citizen support provided to a policy without resorting to political action to change the policy. It captures one aspect of voting behavior—the weight that voters place on public policy offers or past performance—but does not pin down actual voting decisions that are made on the supply side of the market. Actual voting decisions depend upon the supply side of this market—what different options are in fact being offered by candidates competing for power to make policy.11 The supply-side in this framework consists of that sub-set of citizens who enter the market as contenders for power over policy making—for leadership positions in government, both as politicians and bureaucrats, or as organized interest groups that exert influence over leaders and policy making. The analogy to economic markets is the selection of individuals into being consumers on the demand-side versus producers on the supply-side (Table 1). For politicians, actions on the supply-side consist of the 10 This approach to the demand-side is similar to the concept of latent threat of revolution in institutional contexts where citizens have no formal political powers. Citizen behavior on the demand side plays a similar role in democratic contexts where people can vote to remove leaders from office. 11 This point—about voting decisions on the supply-side—is elaborated further below. 13 political strategies that are adopted by different candidates/parties, given electoral rules and political institutions that determine how to win office or gain access to policy-making powers. However, the supply-side not only consists of citizens who run for political office, but also citizens who seek a career in the government bureaucracy. Bureaucratic leaders manage myriad working-level agencies of government and wield power over the implementation of public policies, de facto making policy through how it is implemented. For example, the behavior of frontline service providers, such as public sector teachers, matters directly for whether public spending on their salaries leads to widely shared public benefits (such as, an educated and healthy population). If teachers are absent from the classroom, or not motivated to teach effectively even when present, spending on teachers translates into a high p—providing rents to teachers in the form of a secure government job, but at the expense of the public good of an educated population. We will return to this point, about the supply-side including both political and appointed technocratic leaders who wield power over public policy, further below in this section. Consistent with the view of citizen behavior on the demand side as “takers” of policy, the supply side consists of citizens who have strong preferences for (i) holding office and/or (ii) for specific policies, p, that they would like to have implemented. The first factor shaping who enters the supply-side, preferences for holding office, is consistent with the Downsian tradition of assuming that candidates competing for power select political strategies opportunistically, to maximize the probability of winning (Downs, 1957). The second factor shaping the entry of citizens into the supply-side, preferences for specific policies, is consistent with the “citizen-candidate” tradition in economics (Besley and Coate, 1997; Osborne and Slivinski, 1996). Citizens’ values and beliefs with regard to public goods thus shape their behavior on both the demand and supply sides—what policies to support, and when to enter as actors and contenders on the supply-side. Switching bgetween the demand and supply sides: The decision to “switch” from the demand to the supply side of political markets is a special feauture of political markets that is not familiar to economic markets. The switching decision for citizens to compete for leadership positions, and to participate as voters (or protestors, outside of elections) on the supply-side is determined by the following factors: (1) Preferences over public policies: b j ( p) (2) Preferences over non-economic policies, and directly from the act of participating in politics (3) Beliefs about the behavior of other contenders for leadership (4) Beliefs about the behavior of other voters/protestors The supply-side of political markets is thus intricately linked to the demand-side through preferences over public goods, represented in b ( p) in equation (3). In addition to preferences over the benefits j from public economic policies, preferences over non-economic policies and for particular parties, candidates or ideological positions, regardless of economic policies, shape the decision to switch from the demand to the supply side. These preferences which determine the entry decision also determine subsequent behavior on the supply side. Furthermore, separate from preferences, entry and behavior on the supply side are determined by beliefs about how others are behaving. 14 A large literature on expressive voting suggests that a component of voting decisions, separate from how voters weigh economic policy offers, is whether citizens derive direct utility or value from the act of voting, V(x), where x denotes turning out to vote. Further, citizens may derive utility from aligning with parties who represent their social or ideological beliefs, a, independent of actual policy choices, and from voting to support these parties, z: V(x, a, z).12 That is, voters may derive utility from seeing their “team” (the party which represents their ideological positions) win, regardless of whether their party actually implements policies consistent with their purported ideology. Candidates can, potentially, seek to implement a costly policy index ph, that is disliked by a majority of citizens because it would give them few benefits, but nevertheless win office and the power to implement it by targeting political strategies at manipulating x, a, and z. By separating out demand, as latent voting over public policy from actual voting behavior, which is exercised on the supply-side of the market because it responds to non- policy variables x, a, z, that candidates on the supply-side can manipulate, this framework accommodates a vast literature on expressive voting while retaining a focus on implications of political behavior for economic policy choices. It is therefore possible for a citizen to prefer optimal economic policies at p=0, but nevertheless vote for a candidate who offers p>0 because there are no candidates offering p=0; and/or because the citizen derives utility from voting and therefore does not want to abstain. What the demand curve will then reflect for each point of p—representing social costs due to foregone public goods—is the number of citizens who provide support to that policy by not coming out to act against it on the supply side. For the switch to the supply-side as contenders for leadership, entry decisions are determined by very similar factors as in the citizen-candidates models: what policies are likely to result in equilibrium given how others are voting, and given who else is entering as contenders; how far those expected policies are from their own preferred positions; and, what are the costs of running for office. Prevalent models that emphasize the role of political institutions in determining policy outcomes emphasize the role of the costs entailed in running for and winning office. The framework here includes consideration of policy preferences in shaping entry, in addition to maintaining that political institutions that determine the costs of entry also matter. However, entry costs are subsumed into beliefs about the behavior of other contenders for leadership. For example, in contexts where entry costs are high, such as when powerful incumbents use the coercive power of the state to prevent contenders from emerging, the decision to enter would be shaped by beliefs about how this incumbent would respond. In contexts where entry costs are high because organized political parties control nomination, the decision to enter would be shaped by beliefs about the behavior of these political parties—how they choose candidates and how they mobilize voters around policy platforms. The spread of electoral institutions across and within countries has significantly lowered entry costs for citizens because elections allow individuals to participate on the supply side as voters, compared to contexts where there are no elections. Incumbent leaders or organized parties on the supply side can still manipulate those entry-costs, such as by using violence and intimidation in weak institutional contexts, or passing new laws, such as literacy tests and poll taxes, to regulate voting in strong institutional costs 12 This summary is obtained from a review of the literature by Romer (1996). 15 (Acemoglu and Robinson, 2006). The decision to enter the supply-side as voters would be influenced by beliefs about how incumbent powerful leaders might respond to voters. Policy selection in equilibrium, p*, has to be a point on the demand curve—at least some citizens have to support it by remaining as “takers” on the demand-side of the market rather than choosing to enter to contest power or sanction incumbents as voters. Leaders, or the contenders who enter the supply-side of political markets, will, in effect, choose a point on the demand curve as the selected policy as they compete with one another to win more “decisive” citizen support than others. Political institutions determine what proportion of citizen support is “decisive” in that leaders cannot deviate to another policy choice and still be able to defeat their opponents by wooing other citizens. The formal and informal rules of the game for gaining and remaining in power determine who enters the supply side, and with what motivation—to opportunistically seek public office or to pursue particular policies; and, what political strategies to deploy upon entering the market. Political institutions thus influence which point on the demand curve is selected as policy, as leaders compete for power under those institutions. Since the public policy index, p*, that is selected in equilibrium has to lie along the demand curve, the shape of the demand curve—its slope and elacticity for different regions of p—matters for policy selection. Preferences on the demand-side thus influence the selection of public policies by determining the shape of the demand curve. This is how the framework represents the outcomes of Downsian political competition in which voters play a crucial role in the selection of policy, such as, for example, in the median-voter theorem. I show further below how this framework goes beyond the Downsian tradition and allows for the preferences of citizens to influence policy as potential contenders for power on the supply side. Shape of the demand-curve. Assuming that citizens are, on average, self-regarding and materialist, deriving greater wellbeing from both greater private consumption and greater public policy benefits, we D  0 can draw a downward sloping demand curve, reflecting p (Figure 1).13 To see this intuitively, consider regions of p1, in which public policy allows an elite to control all economic resources and no public goods and benefits are provided to the non-elite population. Low demand in this region of p1 would mean a high proportion of citizens are unwilling to “take” this policy as given and would rather become active on the supply side to oppose it, such as through voting or even violent revolution. At intermediate values of p, the elites in the population who control a larger share of economic resources would pay a higher price in terms of foregone private consumption to finance the provision of public goods whose benefits are universally shared. A higher proportion of citizens would thus receive net benefits from these intermediate values of p and thereby be willing to support these policies. 13 The assumption of selfishness makes it harder to draw demand curves that are downward sloping for all regions of p. It would be easy to draw a downward sloping demand curve in this framework if we assumed that people are altruistic or other-regarding, as critics of homo economicus contend. The critical issue that arises in this framework is whether citizens demand altruistic policies from government, even if they choose to behave altruistically in their private lives (such as, by making voluntary charitable contributions). The literature on crowding-out versus crowding-in of voluntary contributions does not show that private markets can solve problems of redistribution and public goods (Bowles and Polania-Reyes, 2012); rather, similar to the role of government in the Coase theorem, it shows that optimal public policy should take individual responses into account. 16 Figure 1: Demand curve for public policies P 1 P: Policy Index, reflecting the cost D(p of distributive conflict in terms of foregone public goods 0 Q Number of citizens D(P): Number of citizens who are willing to support P The only assumption needed to draw a downward sloping demand curve is that a higher number of citizens are likely to support a more equal policy index, or one that creates more social value, compared to the proportion of those who would tolerate a more unequal or more socially costly policy index.14 This assumption does not preclude the possibility that some citizens, including the elite, may have altruistic or other regarding preferences which may mean that no-one in society would tolerate a policy index of perfect inequality (p=1). It also does not preclude the possibility that poorer citizens may have “populist” preferences for private consumption at the expense of investments in public goods. Populism is to be understood here as the widespread provision of private benefits from public spending policies which have high fiscal and macroeconomic costs (Sturzenegger and Tommasi, 1998; Krueger, 1993). Populist demand would result in citizens supporting certain policies that provide them with immediate private benefits, such as free electricity, but that entail large social costs from which the poor may eventually suffer disproportionately. The crucial feature of the demand curve is not whether it is downward sloping, but rather, its elasticity over different regions of p. Figure 2 provides examples of different demand curve elasticities. Panel A depicts a demand curve that is elastic around a high value ph , while panel B depicts elasticity around a 14 We can also get rid of this assumption and draw demand curves with varying slopes for different regions of p. That does not change the main insight coming out of this framework that the shape of the demand curve for different regions of p matters for what policies are selected in equilibrium. The puzzles we want to address pertain to how even when a large number of people would benefit from public goods, government and its institutions fail to invest adequately in those goods. 17 low value pl . What each shows is the region of the policy index p for which there are large increases in the proportion of citizens who would support those policies. The reason the elasticity of the demand curve is important is because equilibrium policies—those that are selected and implemented by leaders who win policy-making powers—have to lie along the demand- curve; and, leaders are more likely to choose points on the elastic portion of demand curve because there is greater flexibility (compared to inelastic regions of the demand curve) to choose political strategies to win support from a decisive proportion of citizens. Supply-side actors can exploit the elastic portion of the demand curve to implement the corersponding policies by forging together the required support from different groups of citizens, choosing from a variety of political strategies, tailored to prevailing political institutions, or the rules for gaining power. Panel A, for example, represents the demand-side explanation for persistent elite capture of public policies in countries with free participation of citizens in political contestation (Gilens and Page, 2014; Grossman and Helpman, 2001). When citizens are unwilling to act on the supply-side to sanction highly unequal policy indices, elites can get away with selecting a point on that portion of the demand curve corresponding to those unequal policy indices. Panel B, on the other hand, provides an example of a more progressive or enlightened society where citizens would be more likely to take action to overturn highly unequal or socially costly policy choices. This latent threat of citizen action plays a similar role across authoritarian and democratic political systems, incentivizing leaders in both types of regimes to select a policy that enjoys large citizen support (Acemoglu and Robinson, 2000). Figure 2: Elasticity of the demand curve Panel A: Demand is elastic at high values of p (Conditions for elite capture in many political systems, including democracies) P 1 ph 0 Q 18 Panel B: Demand is elastic at low values of p (Conditions for enlightened public policy in many political systems, including autocracies) P 1 Pl Q Shape of the supply-curve. In all of the literature, political candidates or parties (political firms) select policies given their “production function”—the rules of the game for gaining and remaining in power— and the shape of the demand curve. Political candidates and parties are, in effect, “price setters”, analogous to monopolistic, duopolistic and oligopolistic competition among firms in economic markets. Prevalent models that emphasize the role of political institituions in determining public policy are, in effect, saying the following: elites who have the capacity to incur the entry costs of contending for power will exploit political institutions to gain and remain in office while pursuing their preferred policy positions. Even in models in the Downsian tradition in which policy makers are exogenously given and assumed to be purely opportunistic, political institutions such as electoral rules create conditions for duopolistic or oligopolistic competition. Electoral rules that promote two-party systems are characterized by duopolistic competition, and rules, such as in proportional systems, that promote multiple parties are characterized by oligopolistic competition. Authoritarian institutions in which political power is monopolized in a single party or even in a single leader or group of elites, would not yield supply curves—the monopolist political firm would choose its preferred policy point on the demand curve subject to its technology for remaining in power (the production function), including violence and coercion through state institutions to enforce the acquiescence of citizens. In Downsian political competition between opportunistic office-seekers, alternate electoral rules shape the production function of oligopolists, and thereby which point is selected on the demand-curve. For example, Lizzeri and Persico (2001) examine how proportional versus winner-takes-all electoral rules would result in very different implications for whether public 19 goods are produced in equilibrium; when public goods are very valuable (from a technical perspective), winner-take-all systems would under-provide them compared to systems where politicians gain power proportional to their vote share. Investigating the effect of electoral rules and forms of government on fiscal policy outcomes in a large sample of democracies, Persson and Tabellini (2004), find that majoritarian elections lead to smaller governments and smaller welfare programs than proportional elections. More complex models of political bargaining among different groups who pursue their group-specific policy preferences, rather than being only opportunistic (as in the Downsian setting), can be translated into our framework as a search for equilibria among those points that are preferred by the political elite. Highly captured political institutions can be represented as akin to an economic monopolist who sets the price (policy index) to maximize his own preferences and can win office and implement this policy even if it is detrimental to the larger public interest. For example, political institutions that allow violence and coercion may enable leaders to gain and remain in office even while implementing highly unequal public policies. But, political capture need not require violence and coercion. A point on the demand curve corresponding to more captured policies can be supported as an equilibrium even under competitive elections, and even if a non-trivial proportion of citizens would prefer more public goods. For example, citizens who would prefer a different policy outcome than what a political party or leadership has been known to pursue, may abstain (not turn out), vote for a losing candidate, or even vote for a candidate who does not offer their preferred policy because other non-policy considerations persuade them. Candidates on the supply side can use political strategies that are separate from economic policy choices, of appealing to social or ideological preferences, or deploying charisma, to win office and implement their preferred economic policies even when they are different from what their supporters prefer. Preferences play a fundamental role in pinning-down which particular point on the demand curve is selected by leaders when we relax the assumptions about exogenously-given oligopolistic political institutions on the supply-side, and allow for endogenous entry which yields greater comptetion among contenders for power. Further below, I propose a supply-curve for political markets which is shaped by the preferences of citizens who choose to enter the market as contenders of power. Preferences thus determine policy outcomes in this framework through the shapes of both the demand and supply curves. Most prevalent models of the supply-side of political markets assume fixed political institutions, formal and informal, and are preoccupied with examining who are the elites who have lower costs or greater ability to be contenders for office; and, who are the organized interest groups who defray the costs of running, or enhance the ability of contenders to succeed. As discussed above, these models emphasizing political institutions do not yield supply curves at all—elites contend for power as oligopolists and are price setters, selecting a point on the demand curve as the equilibrium policy. One of the innovations in this framework is to propose a supply curve which reflects the other factors that influence citizen entry to become contenders for policy-making power—the distance of status-quo policies from citizens’ prefrred positions and their beliefs about whether others are similarly (dis)satisfied and would be willing to support a challenger. Acknowledging these other factors allows us to draw a supply curve reflecting greater competition for leadership and policy-making powers in political markets. Greater competition arises from the potential threat and actual entry of citizens into the supply-side of the market when 20 public policies are far from their preferences, and they know that they are not alone—others too are dissatisfied and may shift their support away from incumbents to new challengers. As we will show further below, greater competition does NOT ensure more public goods. Outcomes depend upon the preferences of citizens who enter as contenders. To be consistent with the demand-side, the supply curve, S(p), in this framework should tell us how many citizens, from among those who select into the supply side, would pursue policy, p. I propose the following as a model for S(p) in these political markets: citizens who put larger weight on utility derived from public policies, b(p), and who hold certain beliefs about their capacity to be able to shape public policy, are more likely to select-into seeking office to try to shape p in accordance with their preferences. Similar to the intuition for downward sloping demand curves in the previous section, assuming that citizens who enter the supply-side, are, on average, self-regarding and materialist, deriving greater wellbeing from both greater private consumption and greater private benefits from public policy, we can S 0 draw an upward sloping supply curve, reflecting p (Figure 3). Consider regions of p1, in which public policy allows an elite to control all economic resources and no public goods and benefits are provided to the non-elite population. Higher supply in this region of p1, compared to regions of p 0 would mean a higher proportion of contenders for leadership would pursue this policy because once in office it would allow them to extract large personal benefits from public policies. Economic elites would be likely to enter as contenders for leadership (or as king-makers) at a higher rate than non-elites because they would have more to lose from intermediate values of p, where they would be taxed to finance the provision of public goods whose benefits are broadly shared. A smaller proportion of contenders would have the resources to combat economic elites. Entry costs, determined by prevailing political institutions, are thus incorportated into this supply curve. Consistent with the demand curve, the important feature of the supply curve is not whether it is generally upward sloping for all regions of p, but rather its elasticity for different regions of p, and additionally, its position, with reference to the size of p on the y-axis. Figure 3 provides examples of two different supply curves— SL(p) represents the case where political leaders, and bureacrats, who we will now bring back into the picture, compete on lower regions of p—or for more public goods—than SH(p). This approach to a supply curve in political markets can encompass and highlight the links between two very different strands of literature—one on political accountability of political leaders who select policies, and another on bureaucratic accountability of appointed government agents who are supposed to implement the selected policies. A contribution of this framework is how to think about the supply- side as a set of complex interactions among a large number of citizens who wield different powers over public policy as bureaucrats and politicians. This framework can be used to analyze problems of weak public service delivery in developing countries as arising from inseparable links between bureaucrats and politicians, which makes it difficult for any one type of agent—either a bureaucrat or a politician— to improve outcomes without support from the other. For example, SH(p) can represent a politicized bureaucracy where appointments and career concerns are shaped by patronage, and where bureaucrats and politicians together capture public policy. A public- spirited contender who might consider entering the market to try to reform the bureaucracy may not 21 have the capacity to do so, being constrained by other citizens who have selected into the public sector to extract private rents. In this context, where the supply side consists primarily of citizens who have entered to extract private rents, political contenders who pursue more public goods are not only unlikely to emerge, but even if they do, they are likely to be defeated at the polls or frustrated in their attempts to reform the prevailing public institutions. For example, suppose a reformer is able to win an election, exploiting demand among ordinary citizens for improved public services, and tries to implement proven reforms that incentivize public sector teachers and doctors to show up and do their job. In this context of a supply curve positioned at SH(p), teachers and doctors who are absent from the job would not have the incentives to follow the lead of this new politician who wants to make them perform, because the reformers are minorities in the market of contenders with little chance of staying in office (unless the demand side compels all politicians to shift to public goods, thereby shifting this supply curve). That is, outcomes are driven by how citizens think others are behaving. On the other hand, the supply curve can be positioned at lower regions of p, or more public goods, SL(p), representing the case of an effective and professional bureaucracy which implements policies for the public good. In countries which have inherited strong institutions or have evolved effective bureaucracies that are free from undue political interference, citizens are likely to enter into the public sector driven by professionalism and a sense of public service. The point of intersection of a supply curve with the demand curve is the policy selected in equilibrium. For example, the policy pH, at the intersection of SH(p) with D(p), is implemented because it has equal support from citizens on the demand side and contenders for leadership on the supply side. Contenders who pursue p>pH are thwarted from winning office by others who offer more public goods to win the support of citizens who are unwilling to support pH. However, public policies cannot be improved beyond the point of intersection of the demand and supply curves. A public-spirited contender who might want to offer p