Political institutions and income inequality: the case of decentralization

"Political power is being reallocated across territorial boundaries. Traditionally centralized polities are either decentralized or on their way to decentralization. In addition, European nations are engaged in the process of building a common set of rules both respectful to and compatible with their own peculiarities. As a result, the number of political entities in which several levels of government share a common economic space has increased. This paper analyzes how decentralization interacts with the politics of redistribution and inequality. The argument can be outlined as follows. Contra... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Beramendi, Pablo
Dokumenttyp: Arbeitspapier
Erscheinungsdatum: 2012
Verlag/Hrsg.: DEU
Schlagwörter: Wirtschaft / Economics / Political Economy / Volkswirtschaftslehre / policy on income distribution / EU / region / North America / Federal Republic of Germany / political power / Norway / distribution / inequality / Belgium / multi-level system / income / welfare / decentralization / impact / Great Britain / Spain / Canada / OECD / Bundesrepublik Deutschland / Verteilungspolitik / Wohlfahrt / Kanada / Nordamerika / Norwegen / politische Macht / Auswirkung / Verteilung / Mehrebenensystem / Spanien / Großbritannien / Einkommen / Belgien / Ungleichheit / Dezentralisation / Theorieanwendung / theory application
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26978423
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/11185

"Political power is being reallocated across territorial boundaries. Traditionally centralized polities are either decentralized or on their way to decentralization. In addition, European nations are engaged in the process of building a common set of rules both respectful to and compatible with their own peculiarities. As a result, the number of political entities in which several levels of government share a common economic space has increased. This paper analyzes how decentralization interacts with the politics of redistribution and inequality. The argument can be outlined as follows. Contrary to what is conventionally argued, decentralization per se does not necessarily lead towards higher (or lower) levels of income inequality. Whatever the impact of decentralization on the distribution of income may be, it is to a large extent a function of the internal structures of inequality within regions and their combination. Secondly, if decentralization indeed leads to different distributive outcomes, there are reasons to believe that, in the context of multilevel governance, contentions about the institutional design of redistribution are themselves contentions about who gets what. Such contentions make decentralization endogenous to the territorial structure of inequality by virtue of a political process linking the latter to the preferences about the institutional design of redistribution. The first part of the paper formalizes this argument. The second one tests its main implications against a data set of 15 OECD countries over the period 1980-1997." (author's abstract) ; "Politische Macht wird über territoriale Grenzen hinaus neu verteilt. Traditionell zentralisierte Länder haben sich bereits dezentralisiert oder sind auf dem Wege der Dezentralisierung. Zusätzlich befinden sich die europäischen Nationen in einem Prozess des Aufbaus eines gemeinsamen Regelwerkes, das einerseits ihre eigenen Besonderheiten respektieren soll und andererseits mit diesen Besonderheiten vereinbar zu sein hat. Das Ergebnis ist eine ...