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Policymaking in multiparty presidential regimes : a comparison between Brazil and Ecuador

By: PEREIRA, Carlos.
Contributor(s): ACOSTA, Andrés Mejía.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: Malden : Wiley-Blackwell, oct. 2010Subject(s): Sistema de Governo | Justiça Eleitoral | Aspecto Histórico | Ciência Política | Brasil | Equador | América LatinaGovernance: An International Journal of Policy, Administration, and Institutions 23, 4, p. 641-666Abstract: This paper explores why two countries with similar electoral, partisan, and presidential institutions, have produced significantly different policy outcomes in Latin America. Brazil and Ecuador are conventionally known as having highly fragmented party systems, where legislators have great incentives to cultivate a personal vote. Presidents are perceived to be strong and to make large use of government resources in order to advance their agenda. Yet, policies in Brazil are more likely to respond to shocks and to be more stable over time than policies in Ecuador, where policies remain vulnerable to political changes and realignments. We argue that this variation is explained by the different nature of political coalitions formed in each country. We identify three factors that increase the executive's ability to craft governing coalitions in congress: the availability of valuable coalition currencies, the influence of long-term political horizons, and the extent to which political transactions are credibly and effectively enforced
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This paper explores why two countries with similar electoral, partisan, and presidential institutions, have produced significantly different policy outcomes in Latin America. Brazil and Ecuador are conventionally known as having highly fragmented party systems, where legislators have great incentives to cultivate a personal vote. Presidents are perceived to be strong and to make large use of government resources in order to advance their agenda. Yet, policies in Brazil are more likely to respond to shocks and to be more stable over time than policies in Ecuador, where policies remain vulnerable to political changes and realignments. We argue that this variation is explained by the different nature of political coalitions formed in each country. We identify three factors that increase the executive's ability to craft governing coalitions in congress: the availability of valuable coalition currencies, the influence of long-term political horizons, and the extent to which political transactions are credibly and effectively enforced

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