Learning from Failure: A Review of Peter Schuck's Why Government Fails So Often: And How It Can Do Better
- 1 September 2015
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Economic Association in Journal of Economic Literature
- Vol. 53 (3) , 667-674
- https://doi.org/10.1257/jel.53.3.667
Abstract
Peter Schuck catalogs an overwhelming list of US government failures. He points to both structural problems (culture and institutions) and incentives. Despairing of cultural change, Schuck focuses on incentives. He relies on Charles Wolf 's theory of nonmarket failures in which “internalities” replace the heavily-studied market failure from externalities (Wolf 1979). Internalities are evidence of a discord between the public goals by which a program is defended and the private goals of its administrators. What might economists contribute? We suggest that economists have neglected internalities because they take group goals as exogenously determined and we defend an alternative tradition in which group goals are endogenously determined.(JEL A11, D72, D82)Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Soviet growth and American textbooks: An endogenous pastJournal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2011
- An Economic Approach to the Law of EvidenceStanford Law Review, 1999
- The Law and Economics of the Economic Expert WitnessJournal of Economic Perspectives, 1999
- Naive, Biased, yet Bayesian: Can Juries Interpret Selectively Produced Evidence?Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, 1996
- A Theory of Nonmarket Failure: Framework for Implementation AnalysisThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1979
- Positive Economics, Welfare Economics, and Political EconomyThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1959
- THE PROBLEM OF ALIEN IMMIGRATION INTO GREAT BRITAIN, ILLUSTRATED BY AN EXAMINATION OF RUSSIAN AND POLISH JEWISH CHILDRENAnnals of Eugenics, 1925