The Theory of Government Failure
- 1 October 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Political Science
- Vol. 21 (4) , 423-442
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007123400006244
Abstract
This article outlines a theory of government failure that parallels the more well-established theory of market failure. It builds on the work of the public choice school concerning the behaviour of governments under the assumption that all relevant agents pursue their selfinterest. It examines the theoretical consequences for efficiency and equity of three kinds of government activity: provision, subsidy and regulation. The conclusion is reached that all three may create inefficiency and inequity, but that the form and magnitude of the failure will differ with the type of activity; hence it is important that the three are distinguished. It is also emphasised that the extent of government failure in each case (and whether it is greater or smaller than the corresponding areas of market failure) is ultimately an empirical question, not a theoretical one.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Equity Versus Efficiency: The Elusive Trade-OffEthics, 1990
- Privatization: An Economic AnalysisSouthern Economic Journal, 1990
- How Far is the Poll Tax a ‘Communitv Charge’? The Implications of Service Usage EvidencePolicy & Politics, 1989
- Charges as Contested SignalsJournal of Public Policy, 1989
- Creeping Universalism in the Welfare State: Evidence from AustraliaJournal of Public Policy, 1986
- Bureaucrats, Budgets and the Growth of the State: Reconstructing an Instrumental ModelBritish Journal of Political Science, 1985
- RATIONAL POLITICIANS AND RATIONAL BUREAUCRATS IN WASHINGTON AND WHITEHALLPublic Administration, 1982
- A Theory of Nonmarket Failure: Framework for Implementation AnalysisThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1979
- See No Evil, Hear No Evil, Speak No Evil: President, Congress & the Administrative BranchPresidential Spending Power. By Louis Fisher The Power of the Modern Presidency. By Erwin Hargrove Administrative Feedback. By Herbert Kaufman The Domestic Presidency: Decision-Making in the White House. By John H. Kessel Bureaucracy and Representative Government. By William A. Niskanen Notes on the Old System: To Transform American Politics. By Marcus RaskinPolity, 1976
- Director's Law of Public Income RedistributionThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1970