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Working
Paper Series:
07.13
The Fiscal Consequences of Electoral Institutions
Christopher R. Berry and Jacob E. Gersen
http://www.harrisschool.uchicago.edu/faculty/web-pages/christopher-berry.asp
Abstract:
There are more than 500,000 elected officials in the United States, 96 percent of whom
serve in local governments. Electoral density—the number of elected officials per capita
or per governmental unit—varies greatly from place to place. The most electorally dense
county has more than 20 times the average number of elected officials per capita. In this
paper, we offer the first systematic investigation of the link between electoral density and
fiscal policy. Drawing on principal-agent theories of representation, we argue that
electoral density presents a tradeoff between accountability and monitoring costs.
Increasing the number of specialized elected offices promotes issue unbundling, reducing
slack between citizen preferences and government policy; but the costs of monitoring a
larger number of officials may offset these benefits, producing greater latitude for
politicians to pursue their own goals at the expense of citizen interests. Thus, we predict
diminishing returns to electoral density, suggesting a U-shaped relationship between the
number of local officials and government fidelity to citizen preferences. Using a countylevel
dataset of all elected officials in the United States, we evaluate this theory along
with competing theories from the existing literature. Empirically, we find evidence that
public sector size decreases with electoral density up to a point, beyond which budgets
grow as more officials are added within a community.
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