CeDEx
Centre for Decision Research and Experimental Economics

CeDEx workshop - Peter Buisseret (Warwick University)

Date(s)
Wednesday 18th February 2015 (14:00-15:00)
Description

Dynamics of Policymaking: Stepping Back to Leap Forward, Stepping Forward to Keep Back

We study a model of dynamic policy-making with three distinct features. First, policy agreements made today persist until they are replaced with a new agreement. Second, agents take into account the dynamic consequences of today's policies for future policy-making opportunities. Third, there is uncertainty about who will hold political power to propose and to veto policy changes in the future. We study the optimal reform agenda of agents who face such an environment and who either favor or oppose long-run reform vis-a-vis an initial status quo. We show that today's agenda-setter may hold back from fully exploiting present opportunities to move policy towards her long-run ideal. When there is a high chance that tomorrow's proposer and veto player are aligned in favor of long-term reform, an agenda-setter who is hostile to long-run reform may even implement more reform in the short-term than an agenda-setter who favors long-term reform. Optimal proposals vary both continuously or discontinuously and possibly non-monotonically with changes in agents' uncertainty, ideological tastes and patience. In addition to the threat of losing future political power, we uncover circumstances in which the prospect of retaining power serves as an equally powerful motivation for agents to hold back from fully exploiting their contemporary opportunity to change policy.

Centre for Decision Research and Experimental Economics

Sir Clive Granger Building
University of Nottingham
University Park
Nottingham, NG7 2RD

telephone: +44 (0)115 951 5458
Enquiries: jose.guinotsaporta@nottingham.ac.uk
Experiments: cedex@nottingham.ac.uk