Composition of Government Budget, Non-single Peakedness, and Majority Voting.
In this paper we study whether majority voting equilibria exist when preferences over public policies are not single peaked. The government levies a proportional income tax. Tax revenue is used to finance a uniform lump-sum transfer and public education. Individuals vote on the composition of the government budget. We show that the single-crossing property cannot be invoked to establish existence of a majority voting equilibrium. In a simple parametric example we find that cycles are pervasive. Copyright 2001 by Blackwell Publishing Inc.
Year of publication: |
2001
|
---|---|
Authors: | Bearse, Peter ; Glomm, Gerhard ; Janeba, Eckhard |
Published in: |
Journal of Public Economic Theory. - Association for Public Economic Theory - APET, ISSN 1097-3923. - Vol. 3.2001, 4, p. 471-81
|
Publisher: |
Association for Public Economic Theory - APET |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Why poor countries rely mostly on redistribution in-kind
Bearse, Peter M., (2000)
-
Composition of government budget, non-single peakedness, and majority voting
Bearse, Peter M., (2001)
-
Why do education vouchers fail at the ballot box?
Bearse, Peter, (2009)
- More ...