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Decentralization and inflation : commitment, collective action, or continuity?

By: TREISMAN, Daniel.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 2000American Political Science Review 94, 4, p. 837-858Abstract: Do political and fiscal decentralization make it easier or harder to control inflation? Statistical analysis of average annual inflation rates in a panel of 87 countries in the 1970s and 1980s found no clear relatioship between decentralization and the level of inflation. Political decentralization, however, does appear to reduce change in countries` relative inflation rates over time. By creating additional veto players, federal structure may "lock in" existing patterns of monetary policy - whether inflationary or strict. Among the (mostly developed) countries that started with low inflation, inflation tended to increase more slowly in federations than in unitary states. Among the (mostly developing) countries that started with high infaltio, infaltion tended to increase faster in the federations. There is evidence that political decentralization locks in a country`s degree of practical central bank independence - whether high or low - and the relative hardness of softness of budege constraints on subnational governments
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Periódico Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos
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Do political and fiscal decentralization make it easier or harder to control inflation? Statistical analysis of average annual inflation rates in a panel of 87 countries in the 1970s and 1980s found no clear relatioship between decentralization and the level of inflation. Political decentralization, however, does appear to reduce change in countries` relative inflation rates over time. By creating additional veto players, federal structure may "lock in" existing patterns of monetary policy - whether inflationary or strict. Among the (mostly developed) countries that started with low inflation, inflation tended to increase more slowly in federations than in unitary states. Among the (mostly developing) countries that started with high infaltio, infaltion tended to increase faster in the federations. There is evidence that political decentralization locks in a country`s degree of practical central bank independence - whether high or low - and the relative hardness of softness of budege constraints on subnational governments

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