Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/17114
Título : Political ambition and subnational redistributive spending
Autor : González, Lucas Isaac 
Lodola, Germán 
Palabras clave : REDISTRIBUCIONFINANZAS PUBLICASFEDERALISMOGASTO PUBLICOPOLITICAGOBERNADORES
Fecha de publicación : 2017
Editorial : European Consortium for Political Research
Cita : González, L. I., Lodola, G. Political ambition and subnational redistributive spending [en línea]. En: Gordin, J., RennoInstitutional, L. (eds.) Innovation and the Steering of Conflicts in Latin America. Reino Unido : ECPR Press, 2017. Disponible en: https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/17114
Resumen : Abstract: Government spending is a powerful tool subnational incumbents can utilise to favour different social groups in a federation. As such, it spreads out redistributive conflicts over who gets what (and how) in multi-level democracies. Schematically, subnational governments can either benefit specific groups by allocating public resources to particularistic goods or they can favour a large majority of citizens by delivering collective goods. In this chapter, we analyse the institutional, contextual, and individual-level factors that affect subnational governments’ redistributive spending choices. In contrast to prior research that has concentrated on both institutional and contextual determinants of government spending, we emphasise that individual factors largely explain why subnational incumbents decide to reward certain groups of citizens over others thus shaping redistributive conflicts within their territorial jurisdictions. Our central claim is that subnational executives’ (i.e., state governors) office ambitions – whether they are national-centred or state-centred – affect their decisions to strategically allocate social infrastructure (collective) and civil administration (particularistic) expenditures by delineating different electoral linkages between politicians and citizens. More concretely, governors who seek to remain in their districts will favour their core supporters and invest in patronage-based networks of political support by distributing targeted particularistic goods. On the contrary, governors who aspire to gain popularity beyond their districts in order to build a national career will target larger constituencies by providing collective goods, which are broader in scope and more visible.
URI : https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/17114
ISBN : 978-1785522314
Disciplina: CIENCIA POLITICA
Derechos: Acceso abierto
Appears in Collections:Libros/partes de libro

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