40 results on '"Ernesto Dal Bó"'
Search Results
2. The Paradox of Civilization: Preinstitutional Sources of Security and Prosperity
- Author
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Sebastián Mazzuca, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Pablo Hernández
- Subjects
Civilization ,Geography ,Sociology and Political Science ,Economy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Yield (finance) ,Political Science and International Relations ,Prosperity ,Productivity ,media_common - Abstract
The rise of civilizations involved the dual emergence of economies that could produce surplus (“prosperity”) and states that could protect surplus (“security”). But the joint achievement of security and prosperity had to escape a paradox: prosperity attracts predation, and higher insecurity discourages the investments that create prosperity. We study the trade-offs facing a proto-state on its path to civilization through a formal model informed by the anthropological and historical literatures on the origin of civilizations. We emphasize pre-institutional forces, such as physical aspects of the geographical environment, that shape productive and defense capabilities. The solution of the civilizational paradox relies on high defense capabilities, natural or manmade. We show that higher initial productivity and investments that yield prosperity exacerbate conflict when defense capability is fixed, but may allow for security and prosperity when defense capability is endogenous. Some economic shocks and military innovations deliver security and prosperity while others force societies back into a trap of conflict and stagnation. We illustrate the model by analyzing the rise of civilization in Sumeria and Egypt, the first two historical cases, and the civilizational collapse at the end of the Bronze Age. ∗Dal Bo: UC Berkeley and NBER. Hernandez: NYU AD. Mazzuca: Johns Hopkins. We thank Demian Pouzo, Santiago Oliveros, Bob Powell, Alvaro Sandroni and David Schonholzer for valuable discussion, as well as seminar and conference participants for helpful comments.
- Published
- 2021
3. Information Technology and Government Decentralization: Experimental Evidence From Paraguay
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Ernesto Dal Bó, Nicholas Li, Frederico Finan, and Laura Schechter
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Delegation ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Information technology ,Middle management ,Environmental economics ,Decentralization ,Value of information ,Scale (social sciences) ,0502 economics and business ,Business ,050207 economics ,Sophistication ,Agricultural extension ,050205 econometrics ,media_common - Abstract
Standard models of hierarchy assume that agents and middle managers are better informed than principals. We estimate the value of the informational advantage held by supervisors—middle managers—when ministerial leadership—the principal—introduced a new monitoring technology aimed at improving the performance of agricultural extension agents (AEAs) in rural Paraguay. Our approach employs a novel experimental design that elicited treatment‐priority rankings from supervisors before randomization of treatment. We find that supervisors have valuable information—they prioritize AEAs who would be more responsive to the monitoring treatment. We develop a model of monitoring under different scales of treatment roll‐out and different treatment allocation rules. We semiparametrically estimate marginal treatment effects (MTEs) to demonstrate that the value of information and the benefits to decentralizing treatment decisions depend crucially on the sophistication of the principal and on the scale of roll‐out.
- Published
- 2021
4. AT THE INTERSECTION
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Frederico Finan
- Published
- 2020
5. Progress and Perspectives in the Study of Political Selection
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Frederico Finan
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Political class ,Comparative statics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Probabilistic logic ,0506 political science ,Supply and demand ,Politics ,Voting ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Selection (linguistics) ,Economics ,Quality (business) ,050207 economics ,Positive economics ,media_common - Abstract
Full text and PDF of this article will be published in August 2018 We provide a model of self-selection by candidates in a probabilistic voting environment to shed light on the forces shaping the quality of politicians from both the supply and demand sides of politics. The model highlights the idea that the patterns of selection and the comparative statics of politician quality depend critically on how the costs of running for office vary for candidates with different qualities. The model offers predictions on how the quality of the political class will vary with key parameters pertaining to both the supply and demand for candidates. We use the model to frame a review of the empirical literature on political selection that has emerged over the past two decades. We contrast areas where significant progress has been made with others where important theoretical predictions remain untested or existing evidence does not allow a consensus, highlighting areas for future research.
- Published
- 2018
6. The economics of faith: using an apocalyptic prophecy to elicit religious beliefs in the field
- Author
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Ned Augenblick, Justin M. Rao, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Jesse M. Cunha
- Subjects
jel:D91 ,jel:Z1 ,Economics and Econometrics ,jel:Z12 ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Field (Bourdieu) ,05 social sciences ,Psychological intervention ,Accounts payable ,Faith ,Law ,0502 economics and business ,Falsifiability ,Economics ,050207 economics ,Time preference ,business ,Social psychology ,jel:D8 ,Finance ,050205 econometrics ,media_common - Abstract
We model religious faith as a “demand for beliefs,” following the logic of the Pascalian wager. We show how standard experimental interventions linking financial consequences to falsifiable religious statements can elicit and characterize beliefs. We implemented this approach with members of a group that expected the “End of the World” to occur on May 21, 2011 by varying monetary prizes payable before and after May 21st. To our knowledge, this is the first incentivized elicitation of religious beliefs ever conducted. The results suggest that the members held extreme, sincere beliefs that were unresponsive to experimental manipulations in price.
- Published
- 2016
7. Government Decentralization Under Changing State Capacity: Experimental Evidence From Paraguay
- Author
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Frederico Finan, Ernesto Dal Bó, Nicholas Li, and Laura Schechter
- Subjects
Government ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Scale (social sciences) ,Principal (computer security) ,Middle management ,Business ,Environmental economics ,Decentralization ,Sophistication ,Agricultural extension ,Value of information ,media_common - Abstract
Standard models of hierarchy assume that agents and middle managers are better informed than principals about how to implement a particular task. We estimate the value of the informational advantage held by supervisors – middle managers – when ministerial leadership – the principal – introduced a new monitoring technology aimed at improving the performance of agricultural extension agents (AEAs) in rural Paraguay. Our approach employs a novel experimental design that elicited treatment-priority rankings from supervisors before randomization of treatment. We find that supervisors did have valuable information—they prioritized AEAs who would be more responsive to the monitoring treatment. We develop a model of monitoring under different allocation rules and roll-out scales (i.e., the share of AEAs to receive treatment). We semi-parametrically estimate marginal treatment effects (MTEs) to demonstrate that the value of information and the benefits to decentralizing treatment decisions depend crucially on the sophistication of the principal and on the scale of roll-out.
- Published
- 2018
8. Progress and Perspectives in the Study of Political Selection
- Author
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Frederico Finan and Ernesto Dal Bó
- Subjects
Microeconomics ,Politics ,Voting ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0502 economics and business ,05 social sciences ,Probabilistic logic ,Economics ,050207 economics ,Valence (psychology) ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Supply and demand - Abstract
We provide a model of self-selection by candidates in a probabilistic voting environment to shed light on the forces shaping the quality of politicians from both the supply and demand sides of poli...
- Published
- 2018
9. Building Capabilities for Productive Development
- Author
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Eduardo Fernández-Arias, Ernesto Stein, Jorge Cornick, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Gonzalo Rivas
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Commercial policy ,Development (topology) ,Time consistency ,Currency ,Institutional design ,Agricultural policy ,Business ,Economic system ,Industrial policy ,Key features - Abstract
Productive development policies (PDPs) are notoriously hard. They involve a daunting level of technical detail, require public-private collaboration, are in constant danger of capture, and demand time consistency hard to achieve in a politically volatile region. Nevertheless, the potential of PDPs to revitalize the region’s economic performance and spur productivity growth cannot be ignored. This book takes an in-depth look at 17 cases involving productive development agencies from Argentina, Brazil, Costa Rica and Uruguay, identifying key features of institutional design and agency-level practices that make success more likely in this difficult policy arena. Careful study of these experiences might help successful productive development policies gain currency across the region. The cases in this book should not be seen as the exceptions that prove the rule of lackluster PDP performance, but rather as examples that demonstrate the rule can be broken.
- Published
- 2018
10. The demand for bad policy when voters underappreciate equilibrium effects
- Author
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Erik Eyster, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Pedro Dal Bó
- Subjects
HB Economic Theory ,Economics and Econometrics ,Public economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Causal effect ,Social dilemma ,Affect (psychology) ,JA Political science (General) ,Indirect costs ,Voting ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,050207 economics ,Welfare ,050205 econometrics ,media_common - Abstract
Most of the political economy literature blames inefficient policies on institutions or politicians’ motives to supply bad policy, but voters may themselves be partially responsible by demanding bad policy. In this article, we posit that voters may systematically err when assessing potential changes in policy by underappreciating how new policies lead to new equilibrium behaviour. This biases voters towards policy changes that create direct benefits—welfare would rise if behaviour were held constant—even if those reforms ultimately reduce welfare because people adjust behaviour. Conversely, voters are biased against policies that impose direct costs even if they induce larger indirect benefits. Using a lab experiment, we find that a majority of subjects vote against policies that, while inflicting direct costs, would help them to overcome social dilemmas and thereby increase welfare. Subjects also support policies that, while producing direct benefits, create social dilemmas and ultimately hurt welfare. Both mistakes arise because subjects fail to fully anticipate the equilibrium effects of new policies. More precisely, we establish that subjects systematically underappreciate the extent to which policy changes will affect the behaviour of other people, and that these mistaken beliefs exert a causal effect on the demand for bad policy.
- Published
- 2018
11. Who becomes a politician?
- Author
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Johanna Rickne, Olle Folke, Frederico Finan, Torsten Persson, and Ernesto Dal Bó
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Economics and Econometrics ,education.field_of_study ,Earnings ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Population ,JF Political institutions (General) ,Social class ,Human capital ,Democracy ,0506 political science ,Political economy ,Social representation ,JC Political theory ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics ,Meritocracy ,050207 economics ,education ,Competence (human resources) ,media_common - Abstract
Can a democracy attract competent leaders, while attaining broad representation? Economic models suggest that free-riding incentives and lower opportunity costs give the less competent a comparative advantage at entering political life. Moreover, if elites have more human capital, selecting on competence may lead to uneven representation. This article examines patterns of political selection among the universe of municipal politicians and national legislators in Sweden, using extraordinarily rich data on competence traits and social background for the entire population. We document four new facts that together characterize an “inclusive meritocracy.” First, politicians are on average significantly smarter and better leaders than the population they represent. Second, this positive selection is present even when conditioning on family (and hence social) background, suggesting that individual competence is key for selection. Third, the representation of social background, whether measured by parental earnings or occupational social class, is remarkably even. Fourth, there is at best a weak trade-off in selection between competence and social representation, mainly due to strong positive selection of politicians of low (parental) socioeconomic status. A broad implication of these facts is that it is possible for democracy to generate competent and socially representative leadership.
- Published
- 2017
12. 'Do the right thing:' The effects of moral suasion on cooperation
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Pedro Dal Bó
- Subjects
jel:C9 ,Economics and Econometrics ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,jel:H41 ,Public relations ,Public good ,Affect (psychology) ,Morality ,Moral authority ,Social cognitive theory of morality ,Golden Rule (fiscal policy) ,Moral development ,Economics ,business ,Social psychology ,Finance ,media_common ,Moral disengagement - Abstract
The use of moral appeals to affect the behavior of others is pervasive (from the pulpit to ethics classes) but little is known about the effects of moral suasion on behavior. In a series of experiments we study whether moral suasion affects behavior in voluntary contribution games and mechanisms by which behavior is altered. We find that observing a message with a moral standard according to the golden rule or, alternatively, utilitarian philosophy, results in a significant but transitory increase in contributions above the levels observed for subjects that did not receive a message or received a message that advised them to contribute without a moral rationale. When players have the option of punishing each other after the contribution stage the effect of the moral messages on contributions becomes persistent: punishments and moral messages interact to sustain cooperation. We investigate the mechanism through which moral suasion operates and find it to involve both expectation- and preference-shifting effects. These results suggest that the use of moral appeals can be an effective way of promoting cooperation.
- Published
- 2014
13. The Demand for Bad Policy when Voters Underappreciate Equilibrium Effects
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó, Pedro Dal Bó, and Erik Eyster
- Published
- 2016
14. SELF-ESTEEM, MORAL CAPITAL, AND WRONGDOING
- Author
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Marko Terviö and Ernesto Dal Bó
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Consumption (economics) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Temptation ,16. Peace & justice ,Deliberation ,Capital (economics) ,Wrongdoing ,0502 economics and business ,Deterrence theory ,050207 economics ,Psychology ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Social psychology ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Reputation - Abstract
We present an infinite-horizon planner–doer model of moral standards, where individuals receive random temptations (such as bribe offers) and must decide which to resist. Individual actions depend both on conscious deliberation and on a type reflecting unconscious drives. Temptations yield consumption value, but confidence in being the type of person who resists temptations yields self-esteem. We identify conditions for individuals to build an introspective reputation for goodness (“moral capital”) and for good actions to lead to a stronger disposition to do good. Bad actions destroy moral capital and lock-in further wrongdoing. Economic shocks that result in higher temptations have long-lasting effects on wrongdoing. We show how optimal deterrence can change under endogenous moral costs and how wrongdoing can be compounded as high temptation activities attract individuals with low moral capital.
- Published
- 2013
15. The Paradox of Civilization: Pre-Institutional Sources of Security and Prosperity
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó, Pablo Hernández, and Sebastián Mazzuca
- Published
- 2015
16. Political Dynasties
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó, Pedro Dal Bó, and Jason Snyder
- Subjects
jel:D70 ,jel:N42 ,Economics and Econometrics ,jel:N41 ,jel:J45 - Abstract
We study political dynasties in the United States Congress since its inception in 1789. We document historic and geographic patterns in the evolution and profile of political dynasties, study the extent of dynastic bias in legislative politics versus other occupations, and analyze the connection between political dynasties and political competition. We also study the self-perpetuation of political elites. We find that legislators who enjoy longer tenures are significantly more likely to have relatives entering Congress later. Using instrumental variables methods, we establish that this relationship is causal: a longer period in power increases the chance that a person may start (or continue) a political dynasty. Therefore, dynastic political power is self-perpetuating in that a positive exogenous shock to a person's political power has persistent effects through posterior dynastic attainment. In politics, power begets power.
- Published
- 2009
17. A Model of Spoils Politics
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Robert Powell
- Subjects
Politics ,Spanish Civil War ,Sociology and Political Science ,Political economy ,Law ,Political Science and International Relations ,Opposition (politics) ,Economics ,Developing country ,Empirical finding ,Signaling game ,A share ,Private information retrieval - Abstract
Accounts of state failure in the developing world frequently highlight a logic of “spoils politics” in which a government and an opposing faction vie for control of the state and the accompanying spoils. Attempts to buy the opposition off play a key role in this logic, and an informational problem often complicates these efforts. Because of limited transparancy, the government generally has a better idea about the actual size of the spoils than the opposition does. We formalize this aspect of spoils politics as a signaling game in which the government has private information about the size of the spoils and tries to co-opt the opposition by offering a share of the spoils. The opposition can accept the offer or reject it by fighting. Consistent with the strong empirical finding that the probability of civil war is higher when income is low, the probability of breakdown increases as the size of the spoils decreases. We also study the effects of uncertainty, the opposition's military strength, the cost of fighting, and power-sharing agreements on the probability of fighting.
- Published
- 2009
18. Comment
- Author
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Ernesto. Dal Bó
- Subjects
Political Science and International Relations ,Business and International Management ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance - Published
- 2008
19. Reputation When Threats and Transfers Are Available
- Author
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Rafael Di Tella, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Pedro Dal Bó
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Short run ,Strategy and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pressure group ,ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTING ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Microeconomics ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Repeated game ,Economics ,Game theory ,Reputation ,media_common - Abstract
We present a model where a long run player is allowed to use both money transfers and threats in her attempts to in‡uence the decisions of a sequence of short run players. We show that threats might be used credibly (even in arbitrarily short repeated games) by a long-lived player who gains by developing a reputation of carrying out punishments. This model comprises as particular cases that of a long-lived pressure group
- Published
- 2007
20. Corruption and inefficiency: Theory and evidence from electric utilities
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Martín Rossi
- Subjects
Inflation ,Economics and Econometrics ,Electric power distribution ,Regulatory capture ,Exploit ,Corruption ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Microeconomics ,Order (exchange) ,Economics ,Inefficiency ,business ,Robustness (economics) ,Finance ,media_common - Abstract
We investigate the determinants of the efficiency of firms with a focus on the role of corruption. We construct a simple theoretical model where corruption increases factor requirements of firms because it diverts managerial effort away from factor coordination. We then exploit a unique dataset comprising firm-level information on 80 electricity distribution firms from 13 Latin American countries for the years 1994 to 2001. As predicted by the model, we find that more corruption in the country is strongly associated with more inefficient firms, in the sense that they employ more inputs to produce a given level of output. The economic magnitude of the effects is large. The results hold both in models with country and firm fixed effects. The results survive several robustness checks, including different measures of output and efficiency, and instrumenting for corruption. Other elements associated with inefficiency are public ownership, inflation, and lack of law and order, but corruption appears to play a separate and more robust role.
- Published
- 2007
21. Regulatory Capture: A Review
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Empirical work ,Scope (project management) ,Regulatory capture ,Public economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Discretion ,Information asymmetry ,Phenomenon ,Agency (sociology) ,Economics ,Positive economics ,Set (psychology) ,media_common - Abstract
This article reviews both the theoretical and empirical literatures on regulatory capture. The scope is broad, but utility regulation is emphasized. I begin by describing the Stigler--Peltzman approach to the economics of regulation. I then open the black box of influence and regulatory discretion using a three-tier hierarchical agency model under asymmetric information (in the spirit of Laffont and Tirole, 1993). I discuss alternative modelling approaches with a view to a richer set of positive predictions, including models of common agency, revolving doors, informational lobbying, coercive pressure, and influence over committees. I discuss empirical work involving capture and regulatory outcomes. I also review evidence on the revolving-door phenomenon and on the impact that different methods for selecting regulators appear to have on regulatory outcomes. The last section contains open questions for future research. Copyright 2006, Oxford University Press.
- Published
- 2006
22. Committees with supermajority voting yield commitment with flexibility
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó
- Subjects
Anti-plurality voting ,Flexibility (engineering) ,Economics and Econometrics ,Majority rule ,Delegation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Supermajority ,Cardinal voting systems ,Microeconomics ,Voting ,Economics ,Dynamic inconsistency ,Finance ,media_common - Abstract
A fundamental problem for government is how to combine commitment to certain policies with the flexibility required to adjust them when needed. Rogoff (1985) [Rogoff, K., 1985. The optimal degree of commitment to an intermediate monetary target, Q. J. Econ. 100(4) 1169–1189] showed that a way to strike the right balance is to appoint an optimally “conservative” policy-maker. In real life, however, policy-makers also have power over decisions where optimal plans are time-consistent, so delegating to a conservative person could be undesirable. A flexible delegation device can be found in a large committee of randomly appointed members voting over policy after observing a shock. When facing dynamic inconsistency, under a single-crossing property, there exists a supermajority rule that implements the population median's optimally conservative policy-maker with certainty. Another single-crossing property guarantees that if simple majority voting is used to select the voting rule that will govern policy choice, the supermajority preferred by the median is chosen. For problems where dynamic inconsistency vanishes, the committee will choose to make decisions by simple majority, implementing median outcomes. An application to monetary policy is developed. We show that the optimal supermajority is higher when dynamic inconsistency is more severe, when preferences are more homogeneous, and when the economy is less volatile.
- Published
- 2006
23. 'Plata o Plomo?':Bribe and Punishment in a Theory of Political Influence
- Author
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Rafael Di Tella, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Pedro Dal Bó
- Subjects
Government ,Sociology and Political Science ,Punishment ,Corruption ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ignorance ,Discretion ,Politics ,Incentive ,Law ,Political economy ,Political Science and International Relations ,Economics ,Welfare ,media_common - Abstract
We present a model where groups attempt to influence policies using both bribes (plata, Spanish for silver) and the threat of punishment (plomo, Spanish for lead). We then use it to make predictions about the quality of a country’s public officials and to understand the role of institutions granting politicians with immunity from legal prosecution. The use of punishment lowers the returns from public office and reduces the incentives of high-ability citizens to enter public life. Cheaper plomo and more resources subject to official discretion are associated with more frequent corruption and less able politicians. This predicts that violence in a country will typically go together with corruption and worse politicians. Moreover, the possibility of punishment changes the nature of the influence game, so that even cheaper plata can lower the ability of public officials. Protecting officials from accusations of corruption (immunity) will decrease the frequency of corruption if the judiciary is weak and may increase the quality of politicians. These predictions cannot emerge from a traditional model where only bribes are used. The positive evils and dangers of the representative, as of every other form of government, may be reduced to two heads: first, general ignorance and incapacity, or, to speak more moderately, insufficient mental qualifications, in the controlling body; secondly, the danger of its being under the influence of interests not identical with the general welfare of the community.
- Published
- 2006
24. Capture by Threat
- Author
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Rafael Di Tella and Ernesto Dal Bó
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Economic rent ,Personal life ,Microeconomics ,Politics ,Shock (economics) ,Order (exchange) ,Collusion ,Agency (sociology) ,Economics ,State of nature ,media_common ,Law and economics - Abstract
We analyze a simple stochastic environment in which policy makers can be threatened by "nasty" interest groups. In the absence of these groups, the policy maker's desire for reelection guarantees that good policies are implemented for every realization of the shock. When pressure groups can harass the policy maker, good policies will be chosen for only a subset of states of nature. Hence, honest and able leaders might implement bad policies, and needed reforms could be delayed. In order to make good policies more likely, the public will want to increase the cost of exerting pressure for "nasty groups" and provide rents to those in power. This last result can be used to explain the existence of political parties. They play a role resembling that of the supervisor in the literature on collusion in hierarchical agency. A rational public may also choose to ignore negative media reports on a politician's personal life and, in general, elect "strong" political leaders. The prevalence of coercive methods of influence helps explain why countries may get to be governed by "inept politicians."
- Published
- 2003
25. The Economics of Faith: Using an Apocalyptic Prophecy to Elicit Religious Beliefs in the Field
- Author
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Ned Augenblick, Jesse Cunha, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Justin Rao
- Published
- 2012
26. Strengthening State Capabilities: The Role of Financial Incentives in the Call to Public Service
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó, Frederico Finan, and Martín Rossi
- Published
- 2012
27. Conflict and Policy in General Equilibrium: Insights from a Standard Trade Model
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Pedro Dal Bó
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Conflict reduction ,General equilibrium theory ,Conflict economics ,Economics ,medicine ,Economic system - Published
- 2012
28. Strengthening State Capabilities: The Role of Financial Incentives in the Call to Public Service
- Author
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Martín Rossi, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Frederico Finan
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,labor productivity ,state building, state capabilities, state capacity, public sector personnel, bureaucracy, public service motivation, labor markets, wages, elasticity of the labor supply, personality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Wage ,Adverse selection ,Price elasticity of supply ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,jel:J42 ,Human capital ,jel:J24 ,Public service motivation ,jel:J45 ,Economics ,human capital ,media_common ,public sector labor markets ,business.industry ,Public sector ,Monopsony ,governance ,jel:H1 ,jel:J3 ,Public service ,business - Abstract
We study a recent recruitment drive for public sector positions in Mexico. Different salaries were announced randomly across recruitment sites, and job offers were subsequently randomized. Screening relied on exams designed to measure applicants’ intellectual ability, personality, and motivation. This allows the first experimental estimates of (1) the role of financial incentives in attracting a larger and more qualified pool of applicants, (2) the elasticity of the labor supply facing the employer, and (3) the role of job attributes (distance, attractiveness of the municipal environment) in helping fill vacancies, as well as the role of wages in helping fill positions in less attractive municipalities. A theoretical model of job applications and acceptance guides the empirical inquiry. We find that higher wages attract more able applicants as measured by their IQ, personality, and proclivity toward public sector work—that is, we find no evidence of adverse selection effects on motivation; higher wage offers also increased acceptance rates, implying a labor supply elasticity of around 2 and some degree of monopsony power. Distance and worse municipal characteristics strongly decrease acceptance rates, but higher wages help bridge the recruitment gap in worse municipalities.
- Published
- 2012
29. 'Do the Right Thing:' The Effects of Moral Suasion on Cooperation
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Pedro Dal Bó
- Published
- 2009
30. Term Length and Political Performance
- Author
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Martín Rossi and Ernesto Dal Bó
- Subjects
Macroeconomics ,Natural experiment ,Public economics ,Political science ,Causal inference ,Accountability ,Legislature ,Endogeneity ,House of Representatives ,Productivity ,Term (time) - Abstract
Classic theories of electoral discipline (Barro 1973, Ferejohn 1986) hold that frequent accountability keeps politicians on their toes. We evaluate the eects of the duration of legislative terms on the performance of legislators. Causal inference is made di¢ cult by the potential endogeneity of the duration of terms, which varies markedly across countries. We exploit a natural experiment in the Argentine House of Representatives to overcome this identi…cation problem. Results for various objective measures of legislative output show that longer terms enhance legislative performance. We discuss and test possible explanations. Our results together with interviews with legislators suggest that the "accountability logic"is overcome by an "investment logic."We use a second experiment in the Argentine Senate to determine whether our results are speci…c to a particular chamber and a particular time. The results from the Senate reinforce the idea that longer terms enhance legislative productivity. JEL Classi…cation: H1
- Published
- 2008
31. Self-Esteem, Moral Capital, and Wrongdoing
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Marko Terviö
- Subjects
0502 economics and business ,05 social sciences ,050207 economics ,050205 econometrics - Published
- 2008
32. Term Length and Political Performance
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Martín Rossi
- Subjects
jel:H1 - Abstract
We evaluate the effects of the duration of legislative terms on the performance of legislators. We exploit a natural experiment in the Argentine House of Representatives where term lengths were assigned randomly. Results for various objective measures of legislative output show that longer terms enhance legislative performance. We use a second experiment in the Argentine Senate to determine whether our results are specific to a particular chamber and a particular time. The results from the Senate reinforce the idea that longer terms enhance legislative productivity. Our results highlight limits to classic theories of electoral discipline (Barro 1973, Ferejohn 1986) predicting that shorter terms, by tightening accountability, will incentivize hard work by politicians. We discuss and test possible explanations. Our results suggest that the "accountability logic" is overcome by an "investment logic."
- Published
- 2008
33. Self-Esteem, Moral Capital, and Wrongdoing
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó and Marko Terviö
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,jel:Z1 ,Punishment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,jel:D83 ,16. Peace & justice ,Social cognitive theory of morality ,Microeconomics ,jel:K4 ,Luck ,Wrongdoing ,Capital (economics) ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,050211 marketing ,050207 economics ,Social psychology ,Reputation ,media_common ,Moral disengagement - Abstract
We present an infinite-horizon model of moral standards where self-esteem and unconscious drives play key roles. In the model, an individual receives random temptations (such as bribe offers) and must decide which to resist. Individual actions depend both on conscious intent and a type reflecting unconscious drives. Temptations yield consumption value, but keeping a good self-image (a high belief of being the type of person that resists) yields self-esteem. We identify conditions for individuals to build an introspective reputation for goodness ("moral capital") and for good actions to lead to a stronger disposition to do good. Bad actions destroy moral capital and lock-in further wrongdoing. Economic shocks that result in higher temptations have persistent effects on wrongdoing that fade only as new generations replace the shocked cohorts. Small parametric differences across societies may lead to large wrongdoing differentials, and societies with the same moral fundamentals may display different wrongdoing rates depending on how much past luck has polarized the distribution of individual beliefs. The model illustrates how optimal deterrence may change under endogenous moral costs and how wrongdoing may be compounded as high temptation activities attract individuals with low moral capital.
- Published
- 2008
34. Political Dynasties
- Author
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Ernesto Dal Bó, Pedro Dal Bó, and Jason Snyder
- Published
- 2007
35. Legislative Responsiveness: An Empirical Study
- Author
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Marko Terviö and Ernesto Dal Bó
- Subjects
Competition (economics) ,Empirical research ,Presidential system ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Political economy ,Voting ,Voting behavior ,Legislature ,Public administration ,Legislator ,Democracy ,media_common - Abstract
We use data from the US Congress to investigate the extent to which legislators' ideological positioning responds to changes in the preferences of constituents. We measure the positioning of legislators using DW-Nominate scores (Poole and Rosenthal 1997) and track the ideological preferences of constituents in each legislative district with the vote shares of presidential candidates in that district. We estimate a panel controlling for legislator and congress fixed effects. We find that when districts become more supportive of Democratic (Republican) presidential candidates, the voting records of Democratic (Republican) House Representatives in subsequent congresses become more extreme. The effects we find are small but strongly significant. The effects are stronger for Republicans, suggesting that they are less partisan or more office-oriented. We then construct a relative ordering of legislators' electoral strength and show that the responsive legislators are those whose seats are predicted to be relatively unsafe. We discuss the implications of our results for our understanding of the empirical relevance of various theories of electoral competition.
- Published
- 2006
36. Workers, Warriors and Criminals: Social Conflict in General Equilibrium
- Author
-
Ernesto Dal Bó and Pedro Dal Bó
- Subjects
Commercial policy ,Appropriation ,General equilibrium theory ,In kind ,Economics ,Social conflict ,Capital intensity ,Redistribution (cultural anthropology) ,Economic system ,Policy analysis ,Terms of trade ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance - Abstract
We analyze how economy-wide forces (i.e.shocks to terms of trade, technology and endowments) affect the intensity of social conflict. We see conflict phenomena such as crime and civil war as involving resource appropriation activities. We show that not all shocks that could make society richer will reduce conflict. Positive shocks to labor intensive industries will diminish social conflict, while positive shocks to capital intensive industries will increase it. The key requirement is that appropriation activities be more labor intensive than the economy. Our model can explain the positive association between crime and inequality, and the curse of natural resources; it predicts that aid in kind to war-ridden societies will have perverse effects, and offers guidance on how to integrate international trade policy and peacekeeping efforts. Including appropriation activities into a canonic general equilibrium model introduces a social constraint to policy analysis. Thus, we can also account for populist policies, apparently inefficient redistribution and “national development strategies”.
- Published
- 2004
37. 'Plata o Plomo': Bribe and Punishment in a Theory of Political Influence
- Author
-
Ernesto Dal Bó, Pedro Dal Bó, and Rafael Di Tella
- Published
- 2002
38. 'Plata o Plomo?': Bribe and Punishment in a Theory of Political Influence
- Author
-
Rafael Di Tella, Ernesto Dal Bó, and Pedro Dal Bó
- Subjects
Politics ,Incentive ,Punishment ,Corruption ,Political economy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public office ,Quality (business) ,Business ,Public life ,Discretion ,media_common - Abstract
We present a model where groups attempt to exert influence on policies using both bribes (plata, Spanish for silver) and the threat of punishment (plomo, Spanish for lead). We then use it to make predictions about the quality of a country's public officials and to understand the role of institutions granting politicians with immunity from legal prosecution. The use of punishment lowers the returns from public office and reduces the incentives of high ability citizens to enter public life. Cheaper plomo and more resources subject to official discretion are associated with more frequent corruption and less able politicians. Moreover, the possibility of punishment changes the nature of the influence game, so that even cheaper plata can lower the ability of public officials. Protecting officials from accusations of corruption (immunity) will decrease the frequency of corruption and may increase the quality of politicians if the judiciary is weak. These predictions are the opposite to those emerging from a model where only bribes are used.
- Published
- 2002
39. Capture by Threat
- Author
-
Rafael Di Tella and Ernesto Dal Bó
- Subjects
Power (social and political) ,Shock (economics) ,Order (exchange) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Agency (sociology) ,Collusion ,Economics ,State of nature ,Democracy ,media_common ,Law and economics ,Simple (philosophy) - Abstract
We analyze a simple stochastic environment where policymakers can be threatened by "nasty" interest groups. In the absence of these groups, the policymaker's desire for reelection guarantees that good policies are implemented for every realization of the shock. When pressure groups can harass the policymaker, good policies will be chosen for only a subset of states of nature, a result similar to those obtained in the literature on "delayed reform". In order to enlarge this subset, the public will often find it convenient to elect "strong" political leaders, increase the cost for the group of exerting pressure and provide rents to those in power. The last result could be used as an explanation for the existence of political parties. They play a role resembling that of the supervisor in the literature on collusion in hierarchical agency. The paper also helps explain why honest politicians may choose bad policies and why countries may get to be governed by "bad politicians".
- Published
- 2001
40. Plata o Plomo?: Bribes and Threats in a Theory of Political Influence
- Author
-
Ernesto Dal Bó, Pedro Dal Bó, and Rafael Di Tella
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