Three Essays on the Political Economy of Reform

Three Essays on the Political Economy of Reform
Author: Bogdan Catalin Buduru
Publisher:
Total Pages: 392
Release: 2007
Genre: Comparative economics
ISBN:

The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the transition toward a market economy from a political economy perspective. The goal is to trace the link between the polity-formation process and successful economic reform by identifying the factors that favour or hinder the adjustment efforts. The first essay, entitled "Determinants of Success in Transition", accounts for the dissimilar economic trajectories of transition countries. The aim is to show why the ability to implement reforms is different across countries. A bargaining framework is used to model the political sector. The key endogenous variables are the size of the asset transfer to the private sector and the magnitude of the compensation payments. The main exogenous variables are the relative bargaining power, the magnitude of the threat points, and the transaction costs of providing compensation. The most important theoretical result shows that the higher the opposition's threat point and bargaining power, the larger the asset transfer. The second essay, entitled "Initial Conditions and Economic Reform", is an empirical study exploring the impact of a comprehensive set of factors on the ability to initiate and implement economic reforms by countries in transition. The variables measuring these factors belong to three groups, characterizing the macroeconomic and structural distortions inherited at the start of transition, the competitiveness of the political markets at the polity-defining stage, and the elements affecting the ability to solve coordination and collective action problems. While the regression analysis finds that variables from all groups influence capacity for reform, the factors characterizing the behaviour of the political market at the onset of transition played a central role. The third essay, entitled "Transaction Costs, Strategic Interaction, and Farm Restructuring", offers a transaction cost explanation for the different paths of organizational adjustment in the case of the former state and collective farms in Czech Republic. The focus is on the strategic interaction among the stakeholders in large-scale agricultural organizations. In the presence of a neutral institutional environment, the number of players involved in the intra-organizational process, their ability to make collective decisions, and their perceived payoffs in alternative farming structures determine the restructuring outcome.

Three Essays in Political Economy and Corporate Finance

Three Essays in Political Economy and Corporate Finance
Author: Anqi Jiao
Publisher:
Total Pages: 145
Release: 2020
Genre: Electronic dissertations
ISBN:

This dissertation consists of three essays exploring the issues related to the political economy of finance and corporate finance. The first essay studies whether and how institutional investors exert influence in firms' external governance environments related to law and politics. I explore the role of institutional investors in corporate lobbying of their portfolio firms. I find that greater lobbying institutional ownership leads to more lobbying activities of firms. This effect is more pronounce in the subsample where firms face constraints to lobbying. I identify two plausible channels through which institutional investors can facilitate corporate lobbying. First, institutional investors tend to provide direct support by lobbying in the same congressional bills with firms possessing greater weights in their portfolios. Second, institutional investors protect firms' political information by voting against shareholder proposals requesting additional lobbying disclosure. Overall, I show that lobbying institutional investors actively engage in firms' external governance related to law and politics. The second essay takes a unique insight into the ethics of corporate lobbying. We study the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007, a regulatory reform on lobbying and government ethics, aiming to mitigate unethical lobbying activities. We find that the average market reaction to the reform, which aimed to mitigate unethical lobbying practices, by lobbying firms is positive, implying the reform benefited these shareholders on average. We also uncover heterogeneity of lobbying firms' response to the reform. Following the Act, firms with a history of active lobbying reduced their lobbying activity, whereas firms with little prior lobbying activity increased their lobbying efforts. Finally, we find that after the enactment of these reforms, firms that engage in active lobbying, and especially those with a good ethical reputation, are more likely to appoint politically connected directors relative to non-lobbying firms. The third essay focuses on the dark side of corporate lobbying on firms. Specifically, we investigate the impacts of lobbying engagement on corporate innovation. One percent increase in lobbying expenditures reduces the number of patents by 30 bps, the number of citations by 50 bps, and the average patent value by 50 bps. We find that more corporate lobbying activities causally impedes innovation, in contrast to the conventional stewardship perspective that lobbying brings government privileges. We find that the effects of corporate lobbying on innovation are stronger in the subsample where firms have more resources constraints and lower institutional ownership, which are constituent with both "resources constraints" and "lazy managers" hypotheses.

Three Essays on Development Economics and Political Economy

Three Essays on Development Economics and Political Economy
Author: Li Han
Publisher:
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2008
Genre: China
ISBN: 9780549616511

The second essay investigates the impact of introducing village committee elections on the Communist Party's rule. This essay addresses this issue by examining the impact of electoral competition on village cadres' ties with the Party. I focus on two types of ties: village committee chairs' affiliation with Party branch and village cadres' Party membership. Using village and household survey data collected from 48 villages from 1995--2002, I find that introducing competitive elections tended to remove incumbents. Winners are less likely to belong to Party branches. Exploiting exogenous variations in the timing of implementation, I also find evidence suggesting that, although more non-Party members became cadres when competitive elections were first introduced, they are more likely to join the Party later on. It suggests that the Party may accommodate the new political forces by recruitment while elections prompt pluralization of power at village level.

Managing the International System Over the Next Ten Years

Managing the International System Over the Next Ten Years
Author: Bill Emmott
Publisher:
Total Pages: 76
Release: 1997
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

The authors of the three individual essays in this book reflect on the challenges, over the next ten years or so, of managing the international system and of democratic industrialized societies in that system. These essays have helped frame a re-examination within the Trilateral Commission of the underlying rationale and needed directions of its work. Bill Emmott argues that "the future is defined more by disorder and obscurity than by order and clarity, and that policies must be shaped accordingly to be agile and to deal with a range of potential dangers.... [The] Trilateral alliance has a role to play that is, if anything, even more crucial in this disordered future." For the reforms needed in Japan, Koji Watanabe contends, "Japan has to be all the more international, all the more engaged and active in the shaping of the international setting within which domestic reform has to take place." Cooperation among advanced industrial democracies will continue to "form an important pillar" for Japan within "multilayer networks of bilateral, regional and functional cooperation." Comparing the current period to the end of the last century, a time of unwarranted complacency about the international order, Paul Wolfowitz argues that the foreign policy stakes for the United States and the other industrialized democracies remain very large: "If we can sustain Trilateral cooperation, we will have a strong base from which to tackle the specific challenges we face."

Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy

Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy
Author: John Stuart Mill
Publisher:
Total Pages: 128
Release: 2007-11
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781406582581

John Stuart Mill (1806-1873), a British philosopher, political economist, civil servant and Member of Parliament, was an influential liberal thinker of the 19th century. He was an advocate of utilitarianism, the ethical theory of his godfather, Jeremy Bentham, but his conception of it was very different from that of Bentham. His father's History of India was published in 1818; immediately thereafter, about the age of twelve, Mill began a thorough study of the scholastic logic, at the same time reading Aristotle's logical treatises in the original language. A contemporary record of his studies from eight to thirteen is published in Bain's sketch of his life. It suggests that his autobiography rather understates the amount of work done. His works include Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy (1844), Thoughts on Parliamentary Reform (1859), Auguste Comte and Positivism (1865), Considerations on Representative Government (1861), The Contest in America (1862), and Utilitarianism (1863).