Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T03:23:16.299Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2023

Christine S. Lipsmeyer
Affiliation:
Texas A & M University
Andrew Q. Philips
Affiliation:
University of Colorado Boulder
Guy D. Whitten
Affiliation:
Texas A & M University
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
The Politics of Budgets
Getting a Piece of the Pie
, pp. 257 - 276
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aaskoven, Lasse. 2019. “Partisan-electoral cycles in public employment: Evidence from developed democracies.” Political Studies 69:190213.Google Scholar
Abrigo, Michael R. M. and Love, Inessa. 2016. “Estimation of panel vector autoregression in Stata.” The Stata Journal 16(3):778804.Google Scholar
Adolph, Christopher, Breunig, Christian and Koski, Chris. 2020. “The political economy of budget trade-offs.” Journal of Public Policy 40(1):2550.Google Scholar
Aidt, Toke S. and Mooney, Graham. 2014. “Voting suffrage and the political budget cycle: Evidence from the London Metropolitan Boroughs 1902–1937.” Journal of Public Economics 112:5371.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Aidt, Toke S., Veiga, Francisco José and Veiga, Linda Gonçalves. 2011. “Election results and opportunistic policies: A new test of the rational political business cycle model.” Public Choice 148(1):2144.Google Scholar
Aitchison, John. 1982. “The statistical analysis of compositional data.” Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series B (Methodological) 44(2):139177.Google Scholar
Aitchison, John. 1983. “Principal component analysis of compositional data.” Biometrika 70(1):5765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aitchison, John. 1986. The Statistical Analysis of Compositional Data. London: Chapman & Hall, Ltd.Google Scholar
Aitchison, John and Egozcue, Juan José. 2005. “Compositional data analysis: Where are we and where should we be heading?Mathematical Geology 37(7):829850.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alesina, Alberto. 1988. “Credibility and policy convergence in a two-party system with rational voters.” American Economic Review 78:796805.Google Scholar
Alesina, Alberto and Drazen, Allan. 1989. Why are stabilizations delayed? Technical report, National Bureau of Economic Research.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alesina, Alberto and Passalacqua, Andrea. 2016. The political economy of government debt. In Handbook of Macroeconomics, Vol. 2, ed. Taylor, John B. and Uhlig, Harald. Oxford: Elsevier, pp. 25992651.Google Scholar
Alesina, Alberto and Spolaore, Enrico. 2005. “War, peace, and the size of countries.” Journal of Public Economics 89(7):13331354.Google Scholar
Alesina, Alberto and Spolaore, Enrico. 2006. “Conflict, defense spending, and the number of nations.” European Economic Review 50(1):91120.Google Scholar
Alesina, Alberto and Rosenthal, Howard. 1995. Partisan Politics: Divided Government and the Economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Alesina, Alberto, Cohen, Gerald D. and Roubini, Nouriel. 1993. “Electoral Business Cycles in Industrial Democracies.” European Journal of Political Economy 9:123.Google Scholar
Alesina, Alberto, Cohen, Gerald D. and Roubini, Nouriel. 1999. Political Cycles and the Macroeconomy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Alesina, Alberto and Roubini, Nouriel. 1992. “Political Cycles in OECD Economies.” The Review of Economic Studies 59:663688.Google Scholar
Alesina, Alberto and Perotti, Roberto. 1995. “Fiscal expansions and adjustments in OECD countries.” Economic Policy 10(21):205248.Google Scholar
Allan, James P. and Scruggs, Lyle. 2004. “Political partisanship and welfare state reform in advanced industrial societies.” American Journal of Political Science 48:496512.Google Scholar
Alt, James E. and Lassen, David Dreyer. 2006. “Transparency, political polarization, and political budget cycles in OECD countries.” American Journal of Political Science 50:530550.Google Scholar
Alt, James E. and Lowry, Robert C.. 2000. “A dynamic model of state budget outcomes under divided partisan government.” Journal of Politics 62(4):10351069.Google Scholar
Andrews, Donald W. K. and Lu, Biao. 2001. “Consistent model and moment selection procedures for GMM estimation with application to dynamic panel data models.” Journal of Econometrics 101(1):123164.Google Scholar
Angelopoulos, Konstantinos, Economides, George and Kammas, Pantelis. 2012. “Does cabinet ideology matter for the structure of tax policies?European Journal of Political Economy 28(4):620635.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ansell, Ben W. 2008. “University challenges: Explaining institutional change in higher education.” World Politics 60(02):189230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ansell, Ben W. 2010. From the Ballot to the Blackboard: The Redistributive Political Economy of Education. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ardanaz, Martin and Scartascini, Carlos. 2013. “Inequality and personal income taxation: The origins and effects of legislative malapportionment.” Comparative Political Studies 46(12):16361663.Google Scholar
Arellano, Manuel and Bover, Olympia. 1995. “Another look at the instrumental variable estimation of error-components models.” Journal of Econometrics 68(1):2951.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arellano, Manuel and Bond, Stephen. 1991. “Some tests of specification for panel data: Monte Carlo evidence and an application to employment equations.” The Review of Economic Studies 58(2):277297.Google Scholar
Artés, Joaquín and Bustos, Antonio. 2008. “Electoral promises and minority governments: An empirical study.” European Journal of Political Research 47(3):307333.Google Scholar
Ashworth, John and Heyndels, Bruno. 2002. “Tax structure turbulence in OECD countries.” Public Choice 111(3–4):347376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avelino, George, Brown, David S. and Hunter, Wendy. 2005. “The effects of capital mobility, trade openness, and democracy on social spending in Latin America, 1980–1999.” American Journal of Political Science 49(3):625641.Google Scholar
Ayto, John and Crofton, Ian. 2011. Brewer’s Dictionary of Modern Phrase and Fable. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bäck, Hanna and Lindvall, Johannes. 2015. “Commitment problems in coalitions: A new look at the fiscal policies of multiparty governments.” Political Science Research and Methods 3(1):5372.Google Scholar
Bandau, Frank and Ahrens, Leo. 2020. “The impact of partisanship in the era of retrenchment: Insights from quantitative welfare state research.” Journal of European Social Policy 30(1):3447.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barberia, Lorena G. and Avelino, George. 2011. “Do political budget cycles differ in Latin American democracies?Economía 11(2):101134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basinger, Scott J. and Hallerberg, Mark. 2004. “Remodeling the competition for capital: How domestic politics erase the race to the bottom.” American Political Science Review 98(2):261276.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baumgartner, Frank R. and Jones, Bryan D.. 1991. “Agenda dynamics and policy subsystems.” The Journal of Politics 53(4):10441074.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baumgartner, Frank R., Breunig, Christian, Green-Pedersen, Christoffer, Jones, Bryan D., Mortensen, Peter B., Nuytemans, Michiel and Walgrave, Stefaan. 2009. “Punctuated equilibrium in comparative perspective.” American Journal of Political Science 53(3):603620.Google Scholar
Baumgartner, Frank R., Breunig, Christian, Green-Pedersen, Christoffer, Jones, Bryan D., Mortensen, Peter B., Nuytemans, Michiel and Walgrave, Stefaan. 2010. Agendas and Instability in American Politics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Bawn, Kathleen and Rosenbluth, Frances. 2006. “Short versus long coalitions: Electoral accountability and the size of the public sector.” American Journal of Political Science 50:251265.Google Scholar
Bellido, Héctor, Olmos, Lorena and Román-Aso, Juan Antonio. 2019. “Do political factors influence public health expenditures? Evidence pre- and post-great recession.” The European Journal of Health Economics 20(3):455474.Google Scholar
Beramendi, Pablo and Rueda, David. 2007. “Social democracy constrained: Indirect taxation in industrialized democracies.” British Journal of Political Science 37(4):619641.Google Scholar
Bergh, Andreas. 2021. “The compensation hypothesis revisited and reversed.” Scandinavian Political Studies 44(2):140147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, William D. 1990. “The confusing case of budgetary incrementalism: Too many meanings for a single concept.” The Journal of Politics 52(1):167196.Google Scholar
Blais, André, Blake, Donald and Dion, Stephané. 1993. “Do parties make a difference?American Journal of Political Science 37:4062.Google Scholar
Blundell, Richard and Bond, Stephen. 1998. “Initial conditions and moment restrictions in dynamic panel data models.” Journal of Econometrics 87(1):115143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blyth, Mark and Katz, Richard. 2005. “From catch-all politics to cartelisation: The political economy of the cartel party.” West European Politics 28(1):3360.Google Scholar
Boix, Carles. 1998. Political Parties, Growth and Equality: Conservative and Social Democratic Economic Strategies in the World Economy. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Boix, Carles. 2000. “Partisan governments, the international economy, and macroeconomic policies in advanced nations, 1960–93.” World Politics 53(1):3873.Google Scholar
Bonica, Adam. 2015. “Measuring public spending preferences using an interactive budgeting questionnaire.” Research & Politics 2(2):2053168015586471.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van den Boogaard, Vanessa, Prichard, Wilson, Benson, Matthew S. and Milicic, Nikola. 2018. “Tax revenue mobilization in conflict-affected developing countries.” Journal of International Development 30(2):345364.Google Scholar
Born, Benjamin and Breitung, Jörg. 2016. “Testing for serial correlation in fixed-effects panel data models.” Econometric Reviews 35(7):12901316.Google Scholar
Bove, Vincenzo, Efthyvoulou, Georgios and Navas, Antonio. 2017. “Political cycles in public expenditure: Butter vs guns.” Journal of Comparative Economics 45(3):582604.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Branham, J. Alexander and Jessee, Stephen A.. 2017. “Modeling spending preferences & public policy.” Electoral Studies 49:155172.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bräuninger, Thomas. 2005. “A partisan model of government expenditure.” Public Choice 125(3–4):409429.Google Scholar
Brender, Adi and Drazen, Allan. 2005. “Political budget cycles in new versus established democracies.” Journal of Monetary Economics 52(7):12711295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brender, Adi and Drazen, Allan. 2008. “How do budget deficits and economic growth affect reelection prospects? Evidence from a large panel of countries.” American Economic Review 98(5):22032220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brender, Adi and Drazen, Allan. 2013. “Elections, leaders, and the composition of government spending.” Journal of Public Economics 97:1831.Google Scholar
Bretschger, Lucas and Hettich, Frank. 2002. “Globalisation, capital mobility and tax competition: Theory and evidence for OECD countries.” European Journal of Political Economy 18(4):695716.Google Scholar
Breunig, Christian and Busemeyer, Marius R.. 2012. “Fiscal austerity and the trade-off between public investment and social spending.” Journal of European Public Policy 19(6):921938.Google Scholar
Breusch, Trevor S. and Pagan, Adrian R.. 1980. “The Lagrange multiplier test and its applications to model specification in econometrics.” The Review of Economic Studies 47(1):239253.Google Scholar
Brooks, Arthur C. 2001. “Who opposes government arts funding?Public Choice 108(3–4):355367.Google Scholar
Brown, David S. and Hunter, Wendy. 2004. “Democracy and human capital formation: Education spending in Latin America, 1980–1997.” Comparative Political Studies 37:842864.Google Scholar
Bunce, Valerie and Echols, John M. III. 1978. “Power and policy in communist systems: The problem of ‘incrementalism’.” The Journal of Politics 40(4):911932.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burger, Philippe and Hawkesworth, Ian. 2013. “Capital budgeting and procurement practices.” OECD Journal on Budgeting 13(1):57104.Google Scholar
Burgoon, Brian. 2001. “Globalization and welfare compensation: Distangling the ties and binds.” International Organization 55(3):509551.Google Scholar
Busemeyer, Marius R. 2007. “Determinants of public education spending in 21 OECD democracies, 1980–2001.” Journal of European Public Policy 14(4):582610.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Busemeyer, Marius R. 2015. Skills and Inequality: Partisan Politics and the Political Economy of Education Reforms in Western Welfare States. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Busemeyer, Marius R. and Trampusch, Christine. 2011. “Review article: Comparative political science and the study of education.” British Journal of Political Science 41(2):413443.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calvo, Ernesto and Murillo, Maria Victoria. 2004. “Who delivers? Partisan clients in the Argentine electoral market.” American Journal of Political Science 48(4):742757.Google Scholar
Cameron, David R. 1978. “The expansion of the public economy: A comparative analysis.” American Political Science Review 72(4):12431261.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, David R. 1985. “Does government cause inflation? Taxes, spending and deficits.” In The Politics of Inflation and Economic Stagnation, ed. Lindberg, Leon N. and Maier, Charles S.. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, pp. 224279.Google Scholar
Cameron, David R. 2012. “European fiscal responses to the great recession.” In Coping with Crisis: Government Reactions to the Great Recession, ed. Bermeo, Nancy and Pontusson, Jonas. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, pp. 91129.Google Scholar
Campbell, James E. 2008. The American Campaign: US Presidential Campaigns and the National Vote. College Station: Texas A&M University Press.Google Scholar
Carlsen, Fredrik. 1997. “Counterfiscal policies and partisan politics: Evidence from industrialized countries.” Applied Economics 29(2):145151.Google Scholar
Castles, Francis Geoffrey. 1982. The Impact of Parties: Politics and Policies in Democratic Capitalist States. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Castro, Vítor and Martins, Rodrigo. 2018. “Politically driven cycles in fiscal policy: In depth analysis of the functional components of government expenditures.” European Journal of Political Economy 55:4464.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, Eric C. C. 2008. “Electoral incentives and budgetary spending: Rethinking the role of political institutions.” The Journal of Politics 70(4):10861097.Google Scholar
Cheibub, José Antonio. 2006. “Presidentialism, electoral identifiability, and budget balances in democratic systems.” American Political Science Review 100(3):353368.Google Scholar
Choi, In. 2001. “Unit root tests for panel data.” Journal of International Money and Finance 20(2):249272.Google Scholar
Clark, Tom S. and Linzer, Drew A.. 2015. “Should I use fixed or random effects?Political Science Research and Methods 3(2):399408.Google Scholar
Clarke, Harold, Mishler, William and Whiteley, Paul. 1990. “Recapturing the Falklands: Models of Conservative popularity, 1979–83.” British Journal of Political Science 20(1):6381.Google Scholar
Clayton, Amanda and Zetterberg, Pär. 2018. “Quota shocks: Electoral gender quotas and government spending priorities worldwide.” The Journal of Politics 80(3):916932.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Compton, Mallory E. and Lipsmeyer, Christine S.. 2019. “Everybody hurts sometimes: How personal and collective insecurities shape policy preferences.” The Journal of Politics 81(2):539551.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coutts, Adam, Daoud, Adel, Fakih, Ali, Marrouch, Walid and Reinsberg, Bernhard. 2019. “Guns and butter? Military expenditure and health spending on the eve of the Arab Spring.” Defence and Peace Economics 30(2):227237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cox, Gary W. and McCubbins, Mathew D.. 1986. “Electoral politics as a redistributive game.” The Journal of Politics 48(2):370389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crepaz, Markus M. L. and Moser, Ann W.. 2004. “The impact of collective and competitive veto points on public expenditures in the global age.” Comparative Political Studies 37(3):259285.Google Scholar
Cruz, Cesi, Keefer, Philip and Scartascini, Carlos. 2016. Database of Political Institutions Codebook, 2015 Update (DPI2015). Inter-American Development Bank. Updated version of Thorsten Beck, George Clarke, Alberto Groff, Philip Keefer, and Patrick Walsh, 2001. “New tools in comparative political economy: The Database of Political Institutions.” World Bank Economic Review 15(1):165176.Google Scholar
Cusack, Thomas R. 1999. “Partisan politics and fiscal policy.” Comparative Political Studies 32(4):464486.Google Scholar
Cusack, Thomas R. and Beramendi, Pablo. 2006. “Taxing work.” European Journal of Political Research 45(1):4373.Google Scholar
Dahl, Robert A. and Lindblom, Charles. 1953. Politics, Economics and Welfare. New York: Harper and Row.Google Scholar
Dalle Nogare, Chiara and Galizzi, Matteo Maria. 2011. “The political economy of cultural spending: Evidence from Italian cities.” Journal of Cultural Economics 35(3):203.Google Scholar
Danziger, James N. 1976. “Assessing incrementalism in British municipal budgeting.” British Journal of Political Science 6(3):335350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Darby, Julia and Melitz, Jacques. 2008. “Social spending and automatic stabilizers in the OECD.” Economic Policy 23(56):716756.Google Scholar
Dash, Bharatee Bhusana and Raja, Angara V.. 2014. “Do political determinants affect revenue collection? Evidence from the Indian states.” International Review of Economics 61(3):253278.Google Scholar
Davies, Graeme A. M. 2016. “Policy selection in the face of political instability: Do states divert, repress, or make concessions?Journal of Conflict Resolution 60(1):118142.Google Scholar
De Boef, Suzanna and Keele, Luke. 2008. “Taking time seriously.” American Journal of Political Science 52(1):184200.Google Scholar
De Haan, Jakob and Klomp, Jeroen. 2013. “Conditional political budget cycles: A review of recent evidence.” Public Choice 157(3–4):387410.Google Scholar
De Haan, Jakob and Sturm, Jan-Egbert. 1997. “Political and economic determinants of OECD budget deficits and government expenditures: A reinvestigation.” European Journal of Political Economy 13(4):739750.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Haan, Jakob, Sturm, Jan-Egbert and Beekhuis, Geert. 1999. “The weak government thesis: Some new evidence.” Public Choice 101(3–4):163176.Google Scholar
De Renzio, Paolo and Masud, Harika. 2011. “Measuring and promoting budget transparency: The open budget index as a research and advocacy tool.” Governance 24(3):607616.Google Scholar
Dellepiane-Avellaneda, Sebastian. 2015. “The political power of economic ideas: The case of ‘expansionary fiscal contractions’.” The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 17(3):391418.Google Scholar
Devereux, Michael P., Lockwood, Ben and Redoano, Michela. 2008. “Do countries compete over corporate tax rates?Journal of Public Economics 92(5–6):12101235.Google Scholar
Dixit, Avinash and Londregan, John. 1996. “The determinants of success of special interests in redistributive politics.” The Journal of Politics 58(4):11321155.Google Scholar
Dolls, Mathias, Fuest, Clemens and Peichl, Andreas. 2012. “Automatic stabilizers and economic crisis: US vs. Europe.” Journal of Public Economics 96(3–4):279294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Domke, William K., Eichenberg, Richard C. and Kelleher, Catherine M.. 1983. “The illusion of choice: Defense and welfare in advanced industrial democracies, 1948–1978.” American Political Science Review 77(1):1935.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drazen, Allan and Eslava, Marcela. 2010. “Electoral manipulation via voter-friendly spending: Theory and evidence.” Journal of Development Economics 92(1):3952.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dreher, Axel. 2006. “The influence of globalization on taxes and social policy: An empirical analysis for OECD countries.” European Journal of Political Economy 22(1):179201.Google Scholar
Dreher, Axel, Sturm, Jan-Egbert and Ursprung, Heinrich W.. 2008. “The impact of globalization on the composition of government expenditures: Evidence from panel data.” Public Choice 134(3–4):263292.Google Scholar
Drukker, David M. 2003. “Testing for serial correlation in linear panel-data models.” The Stata Journal 3(2):168177.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dubois, Eric. 2016. “Political business cycles 40 years after Nordhaus.” Public Choice 166(1–2):235259.Google Scholar
Dunne, John Paul. 2012. “Military spending, growth, development and conflict.” Defence and Peace Economics 23(6):549557.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edin, Per-Anders and Ohlsson, Henry. 1991. “Political determinants of budget deficits: Coalition effects versus minority effects.” European Economic Review 35(8):15971603.Google Scholar
Enkelmann, Sören and Leibrecht, Markus. 2013. “Political expenditure cycles and election outcomes: Evidence from disaggregation of public expenditures by economic functions.” Economics Letters 121(1):128132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Epp, Derek A., Lovett, John and Baumgartner, Frank R.. 2014. “Partisan priorities and public budgeting.” Political Research Quarterly 67(4):864878.Google Scholar
Esping-Anderson, Gosta. 1990. The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalsim. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Fagan, Edward J., Jones, Bryan D. and Wlezien, Christopher. 2017. “Representative systems and policy punctuations.” Journal of European Public Policy 24(6):809831.Google Scholar
Falcó-Gimeno, Albert and Jurado, Ignacio. 2011. “Minority governments and budget deficits: The role of the opposition.” European Journal of Political Economy 27(3):554565.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franzese, Robert J. 1999. “Partially independent central banks, politically responsive governments and inflation.” American Political Science Review 43:681706.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franzese, Robert J. 2002a. “Electoral and partisan cycles in economic policies and outcomes.” Annual Review of Political Science 5:369421.Google Scholar
Franzese, Robert J. 2002b. Macroeconomic Policies of Developed Democracies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franzese, Robert J. and Jusko, Karen Long. 2005. Political-economic cycles. In Oxford Handbook of Political Economy, ed. Wittman, Donald and Weingast, Barry. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 545564.Google Scholar
Funk, Kendall D. and Philips, Andrew Q.. 2019. “Representative budgeting: Women mayors and the composition of spending in local governments.” Political Research Quarterly 72(1):1933.Google Scholar
Galli, Emma and Rossi, Stefania P. S.. 2002. “Political budget cycles: The case of the Western German Länder.” Public Choice 110(3–4):283303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ganghof, Steffen. 2006. “Tax mixes and the size of the welfare state: Causal mechanisms and policy implications.” Journal of European Social Policy 16(4):360373.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garrett, Geoffrey. 1995. “Capital mobility, trade, and the domestic politics of economic policy.” International Organization 49(4):657687.Google Scholar
Garrett, Geoffrey. 1998. Partisan Politics in the Global Economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garrett, Geoffrey. 2001. “Globalization and government spending around the world.” Studies in Comparative International Development 35(4):329.Google Scholar
Garrett, Geoffrey and Mitchell, Deborah. 2001. “Globalization, government spending and taxation in the OECD.” European Journal of Political Research 39(2):145177.Google Scholar
Garrett, Geoffrey and Lange, Peter. 1991. “Political responses to interdependence: What’s ‘left’ for the left?International Organization 45:539564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garritzmann, Julian L. and Seng, Kilian. 2016. “Party politics and education spending: Challenging some common wisdom.” Journal of European Public Policy 23(4):510530.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gemmell, Norman, Kneller, Richard and Sanz, Ismael. 2008. “Foreign investment, international trade and the size and structure of public expenditures.” European Journal of Political Economy 24(1):151171.Google Scholar
Gerber, Elisabeth R. and Hopkins, Daniel J.. 2011. “When mayors matter: Estimating the impact of mayoral partisanship on city policy.” American Journal of Political Science 55(2):326339.Google Scholar
Getzner, Michael. 2002. “Determinants of public cultural expenditures: An exploratory time series analysis for Austria.” Journal of Cultural Economics 26(4):287306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giavazzi, Francesco and Pagano, Marco. 1990. “Can severe fiscal contractions be expansionary? Tales of two small European countries.” NBER Macroeconomics Annual 5:75111.Google Scholar
Gift, Thomas and Wibbels, Erik. 2014. “Reading, writing, and the regrettable status of education research in comparative politics.” Annual Review of Political Science 17:291312.Google Scholar
Gingrich, Jane R. and Ansell, Ben W.. 2012. “Preferences in context: Micro preferences, macro-contexts and the demand for social policy.” Comparative Political Studies 45(12):16241654.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gist, John R. 1982. “‘Stability’ and ‘competition’ in budgetary theory.” American Political Science Review 76(4):859872.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gould, Andrew C. and Baker, Peter J.. 2002. “Democracy and taxation.” Annual Review of Political Science 5(1):87110.Google Scholar
Granger, Clive W. J. 1969. “Investigating causal relations by econometric models and cross-spectral models.” Econometrica 37:424438.Google Scholar
Greene, William H. 2012. Econometric Analysis, 7th ed. Old Tappan, NJ: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Grilli, Vittorio, Masciandaro, Donato and Tabellini, Guido. 1991. “Political and monetary institutions and public financial policies in the industrial countries.” Economic Policy 6(13):341392.Google Scholar
Gupta, Sanjeev, Clements, Benedict, Bhattacharya, Rina and Chakravarti, Shamit. 2004. “Fiscal consequences of armed conflict and terrorism in low-and middle-income countries.” European Journal of Political Economy 20(2):403421.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ha, Eunyoung. 2008. “Globalization, veto players, and welfare spending.” Comparative Political Studies 41(6):783813.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hahm, Sung Deuk, Kamlet, Mark S. and Mowery, David C.. 1995. “Influences on deficit spending in industrialized democracies.” Journal of Public Policy 15:183197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hainmueller, Jens, Mummolo, Jonathan and Xu, Yiqing. 2019. “How much should we trust estimates from multiplicative interaction models? Simple tools to improve empirical practice.” Political Analysis 27(2):163192.Google Scholar
Hall, Peter A. and Soskice, David. 2004. Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hallerberg, Mark and Marier, Patrik. 2004. “Executive authority, the personal vote, and budget discipline in Latin America and Caribbean countries.” American Journal of Political Science 48:571587.Google Scholar
Hallerberg, Mark, Strauch, Rolf and Von Hagen, Jürgen. 2007. “The design of fiscal rules and forms of governance in European Union countries.” European Journal of Political Economy 23(2):338359.Google Scholar
Hansen, Lars Peter. 1982. “Large sample properties of generalized method of moments estimators.” Econometrica: Journal of the Econometric Society 50(4):10291054.Google Scholar
Harrinvirta, Markku and Mattila, Mikko. 2001. “The hard business of balancing budgets: A study of public finances in seventeen OECD countries.” British Journal of Political Science 31(3):497521.Google Scholar
Hayakawa, Kazuhiko. 2009. “First difference or forward orthogonal deviation: Which transformation should be used in dynamic panel data models?: A simulation study.” Economics Bulletin 29(3):20082017.Google Scholar
Hayo, Bernd and Neumeier, Florian. 2019. “Public preferences for government spending priorities: Survey evidence from Germany.” German Economic Review 20(4):e1e37.Google Scholar
Hays, Jude C. 2009. Globalization and the New Politics of Embedded Liberalism. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heimberger, Philipp. 2020. “Does economic globalization affect government spending? A meta-analysis.” Public Choice 187:349374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herwartz, Helmut and Theilen, Bernd. 2014. “Health care and ideology: A reconsideration of political determinants of public healthcare funding in the OECD.” Health Economics 23(2):225240.Google Scholar
Herwartz, Helmut and Theilen, Bernd. 2017. “Ideology and redistribution through public spending.” European Journal of Political Economy 46:7490.Google Scholar
Herwartz, Helmut and Theilen, Bernd. 2020. “Government ideology and fiscal consolidation: Where and when do government parties adjust public spending?Public Choice 187:375401.Google Scholar
Hibbs, Douglas A. 1977. “Political parties and macroeconomic policy.” American Political Science Review 71(4):14671487.Google Scholar
Hicks, Alexander and Swank, Duane. 1992. “Politics, institutions, and welfare spending in industrialized democracies, 1960–1982.” The American Political Science Review 86(3):658674.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hicks, Alexander, Swank, Duane H. and Ambuhl, Martin. 1989. “Welfare expansion revisited: Policy routines and their mediation by party, class and crisis, 1957–1982.” European Journal of Political Research 17(4):401430.Google Scholar
Hollenbach, Florian M., Lipsmeyer, Christine S. and Whitten, Guy D.. 2021. “Introduction.” Review of International Organizations 16(1):183.Google Scholar
Holtz-Eakin, Douglas, Newey, Whitney and Rosen, Harvey S.. 1988. “Estimating vector autoregressions with panel data.” Econometrica: Journal of the Econometric Society 56(6):13711395.Google Scholar
Honkapohja, Seppo, Koskela, Erkki, Gerlach, Stefan and Reichlin, Lucrezia. 1999. “The economic crisis of the 1990s in Finland.” Economic Policy 14(29):399436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
How Government Shutdowns Work. September 10, 2019. Stuff Media LLC. Available at: www.stuffyoushouldknow.com/podcasts/how-government-shutdowns-work.htm5. Last accessed October 12, 2019.Google Scholar
Huber, Evelyne, Ragin, Charles and Stephens, John D.. 1993. “Social democracy, Christian democracy, constitutional structure, and the welfare state.” The American Journal of Sociology 99(3):711749.Google Scholar
Huber, Evelyne and Stephens, John D.. 2001. Development and Crisis of the Welfare State Development and Crisis of the Welfare State: Parties and Policies in Global Markets. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Hwang, Sung-Ha. 2012. “Technology of military conflict, military spending, and war.” Journal of Public Economics 96(1–2):226236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Im, Kyung So, Pesaran, M. Hashem and Shin, Yongcheol. 2003. “Testing for unit roots in heterogeneous panels.” Journal of Econometrics 115(1):5374.Google Scholar
Imbeau, Louis M., Pétry, François and Lamari, Moktar. 2001. “Left–right party ideology and government policies: A meta–analysis.” European Journal of Political Research 40(1):129.Google Scholar
Iversen, Torben and Cusack, Thomas R.. 2000. “The causes of welfare state expansion: Deindustrialization or globalization?World Politics 52(3):313349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iversen, Torben and Stephens, John D.. 2008. “Partisan politics, the welfare state, and three worlds of human capital formation.” Comparative Political Studies 41(4–5):600637.Google Scholar
Jackson, John E. 2002. “A seemingly unrelated regression model for analyzing multiparty elections.” Political Analysis 10(1):4965.Google Scholar
Jacobs, Davina. 2008. “A review of capital budgeting practices.” (EPub) IMF Working Paper No. 08-160, pp. 124.Google Scholar
Jacques, Olivier. 2021. “Austerity and the path of least resistance: How fiscal consolidations crowd out long-term investments.” Journal of European Public Policy 28(4):551570.Google Scholar
Jensen, Carsten. 2011a. “Capitalist systems, deindustrialization, and the politics of public education.” Comparative Political Studies 44(4):412435.Google Scholar
Jensen, Carsten. 2011b. “Determinants of welfare service provision after the golden age.” International Journal of Social Welfare 20(2):125134.Google Scholar
Jensen, Carsten. 2011c. “Marketization via compensation: Health care and the politics of the right in advanced industrialized nations.” British Journal of Political Science 41(4):907926.Google Scholar
Jochimsen, Beate and Lehmann, Robert. 2017. “On the political economy of national tax revenue forecasts: Evidence from OECD countries.” Public Choice 170(3–4):211230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
John, Peter and Ward, Hugh. 2001. “Political manipulation in a majoritarian democracy: Central government targeting of public funds to English subnational government, in space and across time.” The British Journal of Politics & International Relations 3(3):308339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, Jason. 2011. “Health care politics in the age of retrenchment.” Journal of Social Policy 40:113.Google Scholar
Jordan, Soren and Philips, Andrew Q.. 2018a. “Cointegration testing and dynamic simulations of autoregressive distributed lag models.” The Stata Journal 18(4):902923.Google Scholar
Jordan, Soren and Philips, Andrew Q.. 2018b. “Dynamic simulation and testing for single-equation cointegrating and stationary autoregressive distributed lag models.” The R Journal 10(2):469488.Google Scholar
Jordan, Soren and Philips, Andrew Q.. 2022. “Improving the interpretation of random effects regression results.” Political Studies Review 111.Google Scholar
Jung, Yoo Sun, Flávio D. S. Souza, Andrew Q. Philips, Amanda Rutherford and Whitten, Guy D.. 2020. “A command to estimate and interpret models of dynamic compositional dependent variables: New features for dynsimpie.” The Stata Journal 20(3):584603.Google Scholar
Kagalwala, Ali, Philips, Andrew Q. and Whitten, Guy D.. 2021. “What about the rest of the pie? A dynamic compositional approach to modeling inequality.” Social Science Quarterly 102(4):15341552.Google Scholar
Kang, Shin-Goo and Powell, G. Bingham. 2010. “Representation and policy responsiveness: The median voter, election rules, and redistributive welfare spending.” The Journal of Politics 72:10141028.Google Scholar
Kanter, Arnold. 1972. “Congress and the defense budget: 1960–1970.” American Political Science Review 66(1):129143.Google Scholar
Kato, Junko. 2003. Regressive Taxation and the Welfare State: Path Dependence and Policy Diffusion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Katsimi, Margarita and Sarantides, Vassilis. 2012. “Do elections affect the composition of fiscal policy in developed, established democracies?Public Choice 151(1–2):325362.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katz, Jonathan N. and King, Gary. 1999. “A statistical model for multiparty electoral data.” American Political Science Review 93(1):1532.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kayser, Mark Andreas and Wlezien, Christopher. 2011. “Performance pressure: Patterns of partisanship and the economic vote.” European Journal of Political Research 50(3):365394.Google Scholar
Kenny, Paul D. 2020. “‘The enemy of the people’: Populists and press freedom.” Political Research Quarterly 73(2):261275.Google Scholar
Kim, So Young. 2007. “Openness, external risk, and volatility: Implications for the compensation hypothesis.” International Organization 61(1):181216.Google Scholar
King, Gary, Tomz, Michael and Wittenberg, Jason. 2000. “Making the most of statistical analyses: Improving interpretation and presentation.” American Journal of Political Science 44(2):341355.Google Scholar
Kiser, Edgar and Karceski, Steven M.. 2017. “Political economy of taxation.” Annual Review of Political Science 20:7592.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kitschelt, Herbert and Wilkinson, Steven I.. 2007. Citizen–politician linkages: An introduction. In Patrons, Clients and Policies, ed. Kitschelt, Herbert and Wilkinson, Steven I.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ch. 1, pp. 149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kramon, Eric and Posner, Daniel N.. 2013. “Who benefits from distributive politics? How the outcome one studies affects the answer one gets.” Perspectives on Politics 11(2):461474.Google Scholar
Kwon, Hyeok Yong. 2005. “Targeting public spending in a new democracy: Evidence from South Korea.” British Journal of Political Science 35(2):321341.Google Scholar
Laver, Michael and Shepsle, Kenneth A.. 1996. Making and Breaking Governments: Cabinets and Legislatures in Parliamentary Democracy. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Leibrecht, Markus, Klien, Michael and Onaran, Özlem. 2011. “Globalization, welfare regimes and social protection expenditures in Western and Eastern European countries.” Public Choice 148(3–4):569594.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeLoup, Lance T. and Moreland, William B.. 1978. “Agency strategies and executive review: The hidden politics of budgeting.” Public Administration Review 38(3):232239.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, Gregory B. and Rushton, Michael. 2007. “Understanding state spending on the arts, 1976–99.” State and Local Government Review 39(2):107114.Google Scholar
Lierse, Hanna and Seelkopf, Laura. 2016. “Capital markets and tax policy making: A comparative analysis of European tax reforms since the crisis.” Comparative European Politics 14(5):686716.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lijphart, Arend. 1984. “A note on the meaning of cabinet durability.” Comparative Political Studies 17:163166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lijphart, Arend. 1999. Patterns of Democracy: Government Forms and Performance in 36 Countries. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Lindbeck, Assar and Weibull, Jörgen W.. 1987. “Balanced-budget redistribution as the outcome of political competition.” Public Choice 52(3):273297.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lindblom, Charles E. 1959. “The science of muddling through.” Public Administration Review 19(2):7988.Google Scholar
Lipsmeyer, Christine S. 2002. “Parties and policy: Evaluating political party influence on welfare policy spending during the European post-communist transition.” British Journal of Political Science 32:641661.Google Scholar
Lipsmeyer, Christine S. 2009. “Post-communist mandates.” Politics & Policy 37(4):715734.Google Scholar
Lipsmeyer, Christine S. 2011. “Booms and busts: How parliamentary governments and economic context influence welfare policy.” International Studies Quarterly 55(4):959980.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lipsmeyer, Christine S., Philips, Andrew Q., Rutherford, Amanda and Whitten, Guy D.. 2019. “Comparing dynamic pies: A strategy for modeling compositional variables in time and space.” Political Science Research and Methods 7(3):523540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lipsmeyer, Christine S., Philips, Andrew Q. and Whitten, Guy D.. 2017. “The effects of immigration and integration on European budgetary trade-offs.” Journal of European Public Policy 24(6):912930.Google Scholar
Lipsmeyer, Christine S. and Pierce, Heather Nicole. 2011. “The eyes that bind: Junior ministers as oversight mechanisms in coalition governments.” The Journal of Politics 73(4):11521164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lipsmeyer, Christine S. and Zhu, Ling. 2011. “Immigration, globalization, and unemployment benefits in developed EU states.” American Journal of Political Science 55(3):647664.Google Scholar
Lütkepohl, Helmut. 2005. New Introduction to Multiple Time Series Analysis. Berlin: Springer Science & Business Media.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lynch, Julia. 2006. Age in the Welfare State: The Origins of Social Spending on Pensioners, Workers, and Children. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Martin, Lanny W. and Vanberg, Georg. 2004. “Policing the bargain: Coalition government and parliamentary scrutiny.” American Journal of Political Science 48:1327.Google Scholar
Martin, Lanny W. and Vanberg, Georg. 2011. Parliaments and Coalitions: The Role of Legislative Institutions in Multiparty Governance. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, Lanny W. and Vanberg, Georg. 2013. “Multiparty government, fiscal institutions, and public spending.” The Journal of Politics 75(4):953967.Google Scholar
Martin, Lanny W. and Vanberg, Georg. 2020. “Coalition government, legislative institutions, and public policy in parliamentary democracies.” American Journal of Political Science 64(2):325340.Google Scholar
Martin, Lanny W. and Stevenson, Randolph T.. 2010. “The conditional impact of incumbency on government formation.” American Political Science Review 104(3):503518.Google Scholar
Martín-Fernández, Josep A., Barceló-Vidal, Carles and Pawlowsky-Glahn, Vera. 2003. “Dealing with zeros and missing values in compositional data sets using nonparametric imputation.” Mathematical Geology 35(3):253278.Google Scholar
McGann, Anthony J., Dellepiane-Avellaneda, Sebastian and Bartle, John. 2022. “Dynamics of public opinion and policy response under proportional and plurality elections.” Economics & Politics 123.Google Scholar
Meinhard, Stephanie and Potrafke, Niklas. 2012. “The globalization–welfare state nexus reconsidered.” Review of International Economics 20(2):271287.Google Scholar
Mikhailov, Nikolai, Niemi, Richard G. and Weimer, David L.. 2002. “Application of Theil group logit methods to district-level vote shares: Tests of prospective and retrospective voting in the 1991, 1993, and 1997 Polish elections.” Electoral Studies 21(4):631648.Google Scholar
Milesi-Ferretti, Gian Maria, Perotti, Roberto and Rostagno, Massimo. 2002. “Electoral systems and public spending.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 117(2):609657.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mintz, Alex. 1989. “Guns versus butter: A disaggregated analysis.” American Political Science Review 83(4):12851293.Google Scholar
Mintz, Alex and Huang, Chi. 1991. “Guns versus butter: The indirect link.” American Journal of Political Science 35(3):738757.Google Scholar
Müller, Andreas, Storesletten, Kjetil and Zilibotti, Fabrizio. 2016. “The political color of fiscal responsibility.” Journal of the European Economic Association 14(1):252302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mummolo, Jonathan and Peterson, Erik. 2018. “Improving the interpretation of fixed effects regression results.” Political Science Research and Methods 6(4):829835.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Narizny, Kevin. 2003. “Both guns and butter, or neither: Class interests in the political economy of rearmament.” American Political Science Review 97(2):203220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Natchez, Peter B. and Bupp, Irvin C.. 1973. “Policy and priority in the budgetary process.” American Political Science Review 67(3):951963.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nerlove, Marc. 1967. Distributed Lags and Unobserved Components in Economic Time Series. New Haven, CT: Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics at Yale University.Google Scholar
Newbold, Paul and Granger, C. W. J.. 1974. “Spurious regressions in econometrics.” Journal of Econometrics 2(2):111120.Google Scholar
Nichter, Simeon. 2008. “Vote buying or turnout buying? Machine politics and the secret ballot.” American Political Science Review 102(1):1931.Google Scholar
Nickell, Stephen. 1981. “Biases in dynamic models with fixed effects.” Econometrica: Journal of the Econometric Society 49(6):14171426.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nordhaus, William D. 1975. “The political business cycle.” The Review of Economic Studies 42:169190.Google Scholar
Norpoth, Helmut. 1987. “Guns and butter and government popularity in Britain.” American Political Science Review 81:949959.Google Scholar
Oatley, Thomas. 1999. “How constraining is capital mobility? The partisan hypothesis in an open economy.” American Journal of Political Science 43(4):10031027.Google Scholar
O’Mahony, Angela. 2011. “Engineering good times: Fiscal manipulation in a global economy.” British Journal of Political Science 41(2):315340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ostrom, Charles W. 1978. “A reactive linkage model of the US defense expenditure policymaking process.” American Political Science Review 72(3):941957.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Padovano, Fabio. 2012. “The drivers of interregional policy choices: Evidence from Italy.” European Journal of Political Economy 28(3):324340.Google Scholar
Palmer, Glenn. 1990. “Alliance politics and issue areas: Determinants of defense spending.” American Journal of Political Science 34(1):190211.Google Scholar
Perotti, Roberto and Kontopoulos, Yianos. 2002. “Fragmented fiscal policy.” Journal of Public Economics 86(2):191222.Google Scholar
Persson, Torsten, Roland, Gerard and Tabellini, Guido. 2007. “Electoral rules and government spending in parliamentary democracies.” Quarterly Journal of Political Science 2(2):155188.Google Scholar
Persson, Torsten and Tabellini, Guido. 1999. “The size and scope of government: Comparative politics with rational politicians.” European Economic Review 43(4):699735.Google Scholar
Persson, Torsten and Tabellini, Guido. 2000. Political Economics: Explaining Economic Policy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Persson, Torsten and Tabellini, Guido. 2004. “Constitutional rules and fiscal policy outcomes.” The American Economic Review 94(1):2545.Google Scholar
Persson, Torsten and Svensson, Lars E. O.. 1989. “Why a stubborn conservative would run a deficit: Policy with time-inconsistent preferences.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 104:325345.Google Scholar
Pesaran, M. Hashem. 2015. Time Series and Panel Data Econometrics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Philips, Andrew Q. 2016. “Seeing the forest through the trees: A meta-analysis of political budget cycles.” Public Choice 168(3–4):313341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philips, Andrew Q. 2017. Manipulating the Masses: New Theories of Political Cycles. PhD thesis, Texas A&M University.Google Scholar
Philips, Andrew Q. 2021. “How to avoid incorrect inferences (while gaining correct ones) in dynamic models.” Political Science Research and Methods 111.Google Scholar
Philips, Andrew Q., Rutherford, Amanda and Whitten, Guy D.. 2015. “The dynamic battle for pieces of pie: Modeling party support in multi-party nations.” Electoral Studies 39:264274.Google Scholar
Philips, Andrew Q., Rutherford, Amanda and Whitten, Guy D.. 2016a. “Dynamic pie: A strategy for modeling trade-offs in compositional variables over time.” American Journal of Political Science 60(1):268283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philips, Andrew Q., Rutherford, Amanda and Whitten, Guy D.. 2016b. “dynsimpie: A command to examine dynamic compositional dependent variables.” Stata Journal 16(3):662677.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philips, Andrew Q., Rutherford, Amanda and Whitten, Guy D.. 2020. “Globalization and comparative compositional inequality.” Political Science Research and Methods 8(3):509525.Google Scholar
Phillips, Peter C. B. and Moon, Hyungsik R.. 1999. “Linear regression limit theory for nonstationary panel data.” Econometrica 67(5):10571111.Google Scholar
Pickup, Mark. 2014. Introduction to Time Series Analysis, Vol. 174. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Pickup, Mark, Gustafson, Paul, Cubranic, Davor and Evans, Geoffrey. 2017. “OrthoPanels: An R package for estimating a dynamic panel model with fixed effects using the orthogonal reparameterization approach.” R Journal 9(1):6076.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pierson, Paul. 2001. The New Politics of the Welfare State. New York: Oxford University Press on Demand.Google Scholar
Pitzer, John. 2001. Government Finance Statistics Manual. Technical report. International Monetary Fund.Google Scholar
Plümper, Thomas, Troeger, Vera E. and Winner, Hannes. 2009. “Why is there no race to the bottom in capital taxation?International Studies Quarterly 53(3):761786.Google Scholar
Potrafke, Niklas. 2009. “Did globalization restrict partisan politics? An empirical evaluation of social expenditures in a panel of OECD countries.” Public Choice 140(1–2):105.Google Scholar
Potrafke, Niklas. 2010. “The growth of public health expenditures in OECD countries: Do government ideology and electoral motives matter?Journal of Health Economics 29(6):797810.Google Scholar
Potrafke, Niklas. 2012. “Political cycles and economic performance in OECD countries: Empirical evidence from 1951–2006.” Public Choice 150(1–2):155179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potrafke, Niklas. 2017. “Partisan politics: The empirical evidence from OECD panel studies.” Journal of Comparative Economics 45(4):712750.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potrafke, Niklas. 2019. “Fiscal performance of minority governments: New empirical evidence for OECD countries.” Party Politics 27(3):501514.Google Scholar
Potrafke, Niklas. 2020. “General or central government? Empirical evidence on political cycles in budget composition using new data for OECD countries.” European Journal of Political Economy 63:101860.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quinn, Dennis. 1997. “The correlates of change in international financial regulation.” American Political Science Review 91(3):531551.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raess, Damian and Pontusson, Jonas. 2015. “The politics of fiscal policy during economic downturns, 1981–2010.” European Journal of Political Research 54(1):122.Google Scholar
Rauh, Christian, Kirchner, Antje and Kappe, Roland. 2011. “Political parties and higher education spending: who favours redistribution?West European Politics 34(6):11851206.Google Scholar
Remmer, Karen L. 2007. “The political economy of patronage: Expenditure patterns in the Argentine provinces, 1983–2003.” The Journal of Politics 69(2):363377.Google Scholar
Rickard, Stephanie J. 2012. “Welfare versus subsidies: Governmental spending decisions in an era of globalization.” The Journal of Politics 74(4):11711183.Google Scholar
Rodrik, Dani. 1998. “Why do more open economies have bigger governments?Journal of Political Economy 106(5):997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, Kenneth. 1990. “Equilibrium political budget cycles.” The American Economic Review 80(1):2136.Google Scholar
Rogoff, Kenneth and Sibert, Anne. 1988. “Elections and macroeconomic policy cycles.” The Review of Economic Studies 55:116.Google Scholar
Roodman, David. 2009. “A note on the theme of too many instruments.” Oxford Bulletin of Economics and statistics 71(1):135158.Google Scholar
Rose, Shanna. 2006. “Do fiscal rules dampen the political business cycle?Public Choice 128(3-4):407431.Google Scholar
Ross, Catherine E. and Joan Huber. 1985. “Hardship and depression.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior 26(4):312327.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roubini, Nouriel and Sachs, Jeffrey D.. 1989a. “Political and economic determinants of budget deficits in the industrial democracies.” European Economic Review 33(5):903933.Google Scholar
Roubini, Nouriel and Sachs, Jeffrey D.. 1989b. “Government spending and budget deficits in the industrial countries.” Economic Policy 4(8):99132.Google Scholar
Russett, Bruce. 1982. “Defense expenditures and national well-being.” American Political Science Review 76:767777.Google Scholar
Saez, Lawrence and Sinha, Aseema. 2010. “Political cycles, political institutions and public expenditure in India, 1980–2000.” British Journal of Political Science 40(1):91113.Google Scholar
Sakamoto, Takayuki. 2008. Economic Policy and Performance in Industrial Democracies: Party Governments, Central Banks and the Fiscal-Monetary Policy Mix. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Sanz, Ismael. 2011. “What do OECD countries cut first when faced with fiscal adjustments?Southern Economic Journal 77(3):753775.Google Scholar
Sausgruber, Rupert and Jean-Robert Tyran. 2005. “Testing the Mill hypothesis of fiscal illusion.” Public Choice 122(1–2):3968.Google Scholar
Scheve, Kenneth and Stasavage, David. 2010. “The conscription of wealth: Mass warfare and the demand for progressive taxation.” International Organization 64(4):529561.Google Scholar
Scheve, Kenneth and Stasavage, David. 2012. “Democracy, war, and wealth: Lessons from two centuries of inheritance taxation.” American Political Science Review 106(1):81102.Google Scholar
Scheve, Kenneth and Stasavage, David. 2016. Taxing the Rich: A History of Fiscal Fairness in the United States and Europe. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Schmidt, Manfred G. 1996. “When parties matter: A review of the possibilities and limits of partisan influence on public policy.” European Journal of Political Research 30(2):155183.Google Scholar
Schuknecht, Ludger. 2000. “Fiscal policy cycles and public expenditure in developing countries.” Public Choice 102(1–2):113128.Google Scholar
Schulze, Günther G. and Rose, Anselm. 1998. “Public orchestra funding in Germany – An empirical investigation.” Journal of Cultural Economics 22(4):227247.Google Scholar
Schulze, Günther G. and Ursprung, Heinrich W.. 1999. “Globalisation of the economy and the nation state.” World Economy 22(3):295352.Google Scholar
Scruggs, Lyle. 2004. Welfare State Entitlements Data Set: A Comparative Institutional Analysis of Eighteen Welfare States. Available at: www.cwep.us. Last accessed October 25, 2022.Google Scholar
Seelkopf, Laura, Bubek, Moritz, Eihmanis, Edgars, Ganderson, Joseph, Limberg, Julian, Mnaili, Youssef, Zuluaga, Paula and Genschel, Philipp. 2021. “The rise of modern taxation: A new comprehensive dataset of tax introductions worldwide.” Review of International Organizations 16:239263.Google Scholar
Seelkopf, Laura, Lierse, Hanna and Schmitt, Carina. 2016. “Trade liberalization and the global expansion of modern taxes.” Review of International Political Economy 23(2):208231.Google Scholar
Seiferling, Mike. 2013. Recent Improvements to the Government Finance Statistics Yearbook Database in Response to Analytical Needs. International Monetary Fund.Google Scholar
Seiferling, Mike. 2019. “Fiscal deficits and executive planning horizons.” Political Science Research and Methods 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seki, Katsunori and Williams, Laron K.. 2014. “Updating the party government data set.” Electoral Studies 34:270279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shelton, Cameron A. 2007. “The size and composition of government expenditure.” Journal of Public Economics 91(11–12):22302260.Google Scholar
Shin, Mi Jeong. 2017. “Partisanship, tax policy, and corporate profit-shifting in a globalized world economy.” Comparative Political Studies 50(14):19982026.Google Scholar
Soroka, Stuart N. and Wlezien, Christopher. 2010. Degrees of Democracy: Politics, Public Opinion and Policy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Stasavage, David. 2005. “Democracy and education spending in Africa.” American Journal of Political Science 49:343358.Google Scholar
StataCorp. 2019. Stata Statistical Software: Release 16. College Station, TX: StataCorp LLC.Google Scholar
Streb, Jorge M. and Torrens, Gustavo. 2013. “Making rules credible: Divided government and political budget cycles.” Public Choice 156(3–4):703722.Google Scholar
Strøm, Kaare. 1990a. “A behavioral theory of competitive political parties.” American Journal of Political Science 34:565598.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strøm, Kaare. 1990b. Minority Government and Majority Rule. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Swank, Duane H. 1988. “The political economy of government domestic expenditure in the affluent democracies, 1960–80.” American Journal of Political Science 32(4):11201150.Google Scholar
Swank, Duane H. 2002. Global Capital, Political Institutions, and Policy Change in Developed Welfare States. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Swank, Duane H. and Steinmo, Sven. 2002. “The new political economy of taxation in advanced capitalist democracies.” American Journal of Political Science 46:642655.Google Scholar
Tang, Min. 2008. “Examining the lagged effect of economic development on political democracy: A panel-VAR model.” Democratisation 15(1):106122.Google Scholar
Tanzi, Vito. 2002. “Globalization and the future of social protection.” Scottish Journal of Political Economy 49(1):116127.Google Scholar
Tavares, José. 2004. “Does right or left matter? Cabinets, credibility and fiscal adjustments.” Journal of Public Economics 88(12):24472468.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tavits, Margit. 2004. “The size of government in majoritarian and consensus democracies.” Comparative Political Studies 37(3):340359.Google Scholar
Thomson, Robert, Royed, Terry, Naurin, Elin, Artés, Joaquín, Costello, Rory, Ennser-Jedenastik, Laurenz, Ferguson, Mark, Kostadinova, Petia, Moury, Catherine and Pétry, François. 2017. “The fulfilment of parties’ election pledges: A comparative study on the impact of power sharing.” American Journal of Political Science 61(3):527542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tilly, Charles. 1990. Coercion, Capital, and European States, AD 990–1990. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.Google Scholar
Tomz, Michael, Wittenberg, Jason and King, Gary. 2003. “Clarify: Software for interpreting and presenting statistical results.” Journal of Statistics Software 8(1):130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tomz, Michael, Tucker, Joshua A. and Wittenberg, Jason. 2002. “An easy and accurate regression model for multiparty electoral data.” Political Analysis 10(1):6683.Google Scholar
Töngür, Ünal, Hsu, Sara and Elveren, Adem Yavuz. 2015. “Military expenditures and political regimes: Evidence from global data, 1963–2000.” Economic Modelling 44:6879.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsebelis, George and Chang, Eric C. C.. 2004. “Veto players and the structure of budgets in advanced industrialized countries.” European Journal of Political Research 43(3):449476.Google Scholar
Tufte, Edward. 1978. Political Control of the Economy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Veiga, Linda Gonçalves and Veiga, Francisco José. 2007. “Political business cycles at the municipal level.” Public Choice 131(1):4564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vergne, Clémence. 2009. “Democracy, elections and allocation of public expenditures in developing countries.” European Journal of Political Economy 25(1):6377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Volkerink, Bjørn and Haan, Jakob De. 2001. “Fragmented government effects on fiscal policy: New evidence.” Public Choice 109(3):221242.Google Scholar
Von Hagen, J. and Harden, I. J.. 1995. “Budget processes and commitment to fiscal discipline.” European Economic Review 39(3):771779.Google Scholar
Walter, Stefanie. 2010. “Globalization and the welfare state: Testing the micro-foundations of the compensation hypothesis.” International Studies Quarterly 54(2):403426.Google Scholar
Weisstanner, David. 2017. “The fiscal benefits of repeated cooperation: Coalitions and debt dynamics in 36 democracies.” Journal of Public Policy 37(2):143172.Google Scholar
Wenzelburger, Georg. 2015. “Parties, institutions and the politics of law and order: How political institutions and partisan ideologies shape law-and-order spending in twenty western industrialized countries.” British Journal of Political Science 45(3):663687.Google Scholar
Wenzelburger, Georg and Böller, Florian. 2020. “Bomb or build? How party ideologies affect the balance of foreign aid and defence spending.” The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 22(1):323.Google Scholar
Werck, Kristien, Heyndels, Bruno and Geys, Benny. 2008. “The impact of ‘central places’ on spatial spending patterns: evidence from Flemish local government cultural expenditures.” Journal of Cultural Economics 32(1):35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitten, Guy D. and Williams, Laron K.. 2011. “Buttery guns and welfare hawks: The politics of defense spending in advanced industrial democracies.” American Journal of Political Science 55(1):117134.Google Scholar
Wickens, Tobias. 2002. Classification of GFSM 1986 Data to the GFSM 2001 Framework. Technical report. International Monetary Fund.Google Scholar
Wildavsky, Aaron B. 1964. Politics of the Budgetary Process. Boston, MA: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Williams, Laron K. and Whitten, Guy D.. 2012. “But wait, there’s more! Maximizing substantive inferences from TSCS models.” The Journal of Politics 74(3):685693.Google Scholar
Windett, Jason Harold. 2014. “Gendered campaign strategies in US elections.” American Politics Research 42(4):628655.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wlezien, Christopher. 1995. “The public as thermostat: Dynamics of preferences for spending.” American Journal of Political Science 39(4):9811000.Google Scholar
Wlezien, Christopher. 2015. “The myopic voter? The economy and US presidential elections.” Electoral Studies 39:195204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woldendorp, Jaap, Keman, Hans and Budge, Ian. 2000. Party Government in 48 Democracies (1945–1998). London: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Wooldridge, Jeffrey M. 2010. Econometric Analysis of Cross Section and Panel Data. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Wursten, Jesse. 2018. “Testing for serial correlation in fixed-effects panel models.” The Stata Journal 18(1):76100.Google Scholar
Wyplosz, Charles. 2012. Fiscal rules: Theoretical issues and historical experiences. In Fiscal Policy after the Financial Crisis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 495525.Google Scholar
Zellner, Arnold. 1962. “An efficient method of estimating seemingly unrelated regressions and tests for aggregation bias.” Journal of the American Statistical Association 57(298):348368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhu, Ling and Lipsmeyer, Christine S.. 2015. “Policy feedback and economic risk: The influence of privatization on social policy preferences.” Journal of European Public Policy 22:14891511.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×