Title of article :
Markets versus governments
Author/Authors :
Daron Acemoglu، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
We provide a simple framework for comparing market allocations with government-regulated allocations. Governments
can collect information about individuals’ types and enforce transfers across individuals. Markets (without significant
government intervention) have to rely on transactions that are ex post beneficial for individuals. Consequently,
governments achieve better risk sharing and consumption smoothing than markets. However, politicians in charge of
collective decisions can use the centralized information and the enforcement power of government for their own benefits.
This leads to political economy distortions and rents for politicians, making government-operated allocation mechanisms
potentially worse than markets. We provide conditions under which it is ex ante beneficial for the society to tolerate the
political economy distortions in exchange for the improvement in risk sharing. For example, more effective controls on
politicians or higher discount factors of politicians make governments more attractive relative to markets. Moreover, when
markets cannot engage in self-enforcing risk-sharing arrangements and income effects are limited, greater risk aversion and
greater uncertainty make governments more attractive relative to markets. Nevertheless, we also show theoretically and
numerically that the effect of risk aversion on the desirability of markets may be non-monotonic. In particular, when
markets can support self-enforcing risk-sharing arrangements, a high degree of risk aversion improves the extent of risk
sharing in markets and makes governments less necessary. The same pattern may also arise because of ‘‘income effects’’ on
labor supply. Consequently, the welfare gains of governments relative to markets may have an inverse U-shape as a
function of the degree of risk aversion of individuals.
r 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
Risk sharing , markets , governments , mechanisms , Political economy
Journal title :
Journal of Monetary Economics
Journal title :
Journal of Monetary Economics