Abstract :
One possible political determinant of macroeconomic instability scholars have explored at length is
decentralization, but cross-national research measuring political decentralization in terms of constitutional
federalism has produced mixed evidence regarding its effects on inflation. Conceptualizing
political decentralization in terms of governing political party decentralization but acknowledging the
challenges of cross-national data collection, the authors suggest the utility of a sub-national approach
by studying one country under single-party rule. Drawing on provincial-level cross-section time-series
data, they find that political decentralization measured as the inverse of central government political
control, via the ruling party, over the different provincial governments is positively correlated with
provincial inflation in China during 1978–97. The finding is robust to alternative specifications,
expanded year coverage and Granger causality tests.