A Game Theoretic Model of Reform in Latin American Democracies
- 1 June 1991
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 85 (2) , 371-392
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1963165
Abstract
In this article I develop a simple game-theoretic model of administrative reform in Latin American democracies. The model, which is based on the incentives facing the politicians who must initiate reforms if any are to occur, yields two predictions: (1) reforms are more likely to pass the legislative hurdle when patronage is evenly distributed among the strongest parties, and (2) initial reforms are more likely to be followed by further extensions of reform where the electoral weight of the top parties remains relatively even and stable. Attention to the incentives facing legislators and party leaders also results in the expectation that certain political institutions, such as open list proportional representation and electoral rules that minimize party control over candidate lists, reduce the probability of reform. I test these predictions and expectations on a set of Latin American democracies and find them consistent with historical events.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Building "State" Autonomy in Brazil, 1930-1964Comparative Politics, 1990
- Political SurvivalPublished by University of California Press ,1987
- The Development of a Party-Orientated Electorate in England, 1832–1918British Journal of Political Science, 1986
- La reforma administrativa de 1968 en ColombiaInternational Review of Administrative Sciences, 1982
- Consociational Democracy: The Case of ColombiaComparative Politics, 1980
- The Colombian National Front and Administrative ReformAdministration & Society, 1974
- Bureaucrats as Modernizing Brokers? Clientelism in ColombiaComparative Politics, 1974
- Civil Service Reform in BrazilPublished by University of Texas Press ,1968
- Administrative Reform and the Politics of Reform: The Case of VenezuelaPublic Administration Review, 1967
- The Uruguayan Coup D'etat of 1933Hispanic American Historical Review, 1952