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Discretion Rather than Rules: Choice of Instruments to Control Bureaucratic Policy Making
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 January 2017
Abstract
In this paper I investigate the trade-off a legislature faces in the choice of instruments to ensure accountability by bureaucrats with private information. The legislature can either design a state-contingent incentive scheme or “menu law” to elicit the bureau's information or it can simply limit the set of choices open to the bureaucrat and let it choose as it wishes (an action restriction). I show that the optimal action restriction is simply a connected interval of the policy space. However, this class of instruments is not optimal without some sort of limitation on the set of levers of control available to the legislature. I then analyze one such limitation salient in politics, the legislative principal's inability to commit to honor a schedule of (state contingent) policy choices and transfer payments for a menu law. In this case the optimal action restriction outperforms (in terms of the legislature's welfare) the best available menu law.
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- Copyright © The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Political Methodology
Footnotes
Author's note: A previous version of this paper circulated as “Menu Laws and Forbidden Actions.” For helpful comments I am grateful to David Austen-Smith, Rui Defigueiredo, Richard McKelvey, John Patty, and Rob Van Houweling and audience members at the 2002 annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association and seminar participants in the Political Science Department at the University of California, Berkeley. The conclusions in this paper do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
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