Use this link to cite:
http://hdl.handle.net/2183/23379 Are political support-driven policies always bad? The case of large interest groups
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Authors
Lagadec, Gaël
Advisors
Other responsabilities
Journal Title
Bibliographic citation
Lagadec, G. (2014). Are political support-driven policies always bad? The case of large interest groups. European Journal of Government and Economics, 3(2), 138-147. https://doi.org/10.17979/ejge.2014.3.2.4302
Type of academic work
Academic degree
Abstract
[Abstract] The action of active interest groups (lobbies) has been traditionally considered to be a source of harmful waste for the economy which reduces social well-being. Can this analysis be adapted to the case of large unorganised groups which do not ask for anything directly? Or, on the contrary, does the setting up of policies which improve the situation of these large groups permit an improvement in social welfare? We start from classical (public choice) analyses of lobbying and rent-seeking developed since the 1970s, closely linked with the hypothesis of re-election-seeking politicians, before extending our analysis also to consider non-sector-specific policies and passive interest groups (notably those too large to meet the Olsonian condition of efficient collective action). Then the research question to be answered becomes whether promoting the interest of large groups can deliver social welfare as defined by the incumbent’s social welfare function. We refer to the political cycles’ evidence to consider that no social welfare objective can motivate the favouring of large groups.
Description
Editor version
Rights
Atribución 4.0 España


