Entry and Asymmetric Lobbying: Why Governments Pick Losers

Détails

ID Serval
serval:BIB_E1CF892A7926
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Titre
Entry and Asymmetric Lobbying: Why Governments Pick Losers
Périodique
Journal of the European Economic Association
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Baldwin R., Robert-Nicoud F.
ISSN
1542-4766
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
09/2007
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
5
Numéro
5
Pages
1064-1093
Langue
anglais
Résumé
Governments frequently intervene to support domestic industries, but a surprising amount of this support goes to ailing sectors. We explain this with a lobbying model that allows for entry and sunk costs. Specifically, policy is influenced by pressure groups that incur lobbying expenses to create rents. In expanding industries, entry tends to erode such rents, but in declining industries, sunk costs rule out entry as long as the rents are not too high. This asymmetric appropriability of rents means losers lobby harder. Thus it is not that government policy picks losers, it is that losers pick government policy.
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Création de la notice
27/10/2016 11:20
Dernière modification de la notice
20/08/2019 17:05
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