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The Theory of Government Failure
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2009
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This article outlines a theory of government failure that parallels the more well-established theory of market failure. It builds on the work of the public choice school concerning the behaviour of governments under the assumption that all relevant agents pursue their selfinterest. It examines the theoretical consequences for efficiency and equity of three kinds of government activity: provision, subsidy and regulation. The conclusion is reached that all three may create inefficiency and inequity, but that the form and magnitude of the failure will differ with the type of activity; hence it is important that the three are distinguished. It is also emphasised that the extent of government failure in each case (and whether it is greater or smaller than the corresponding areas of market failure) is ultimately an empirical question, not a theoretical one.
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References
1 Wolf, Charles Jr, ‘A Theory of Nonmarket Failure’, Journal of Law and Economics, 22 (1979), 107–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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5 For a fuller exposition of the theory of market failure and its application that is accessible to non-specialists, see Le Grand, J., Propper, C. and Robinson, R., The Economics of Social Problems, 3rd edn (London: Macmillan, 1991).Google Scholar For those with a little more economics training, another useful text is Barr, N., The Economics of the Welfare State (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1987).Google Scholar
6 There are of course other social objectives or values against which market performance can be judged, such as the preservation of liberty or the promotion of a sense of community. Welfare economics textbooks usually give these even less attention than equity; a limited exception is LeGrand, Propper and Robinson, The Economics of Social Problems. An important recent discussion of the ability of markets to attain a broader set of social objectives can be found in Miller, D., Markets, State and Community (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989).Google Scholar See also some of the contributions to Le Grand, J. and Estrin, S., eds, Market Socialism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989)Google Scholar, particularly those by Millerand R. Plant.
7 Strictly, this second definition of allocative efficiency is equivalent to ‘potential’ Pareto efficiency whereby an allocation of resources is efficient if it is impossible for the gainers from any change potentially to compensate the losers and still remain better off. For further discussions of different definitions of economic efficiency (including Pareto-efficiency) and of the values they imply, see Le Grand, J., ‘Equity vs Efficiency: The Elusive Trade-off’, Ethics, 100 (1990), 554–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar, reproduced as chap. 3 in Le Grand, J., Equity and Choice (London: Harper Collins, 1991).Google Scholar
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9 If insurance companies had sufficient information concerning the patient's condition, they could control the moral hazard problem by determining the efficient level of treatment beforehand and only re-imbursing up to that level. However, they have difficulty doing this precisely because of the information difficulties associated with medical care.
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24 The median voter theorem has its origins in Hotelling, Harold's ‘Stability in Competition’, Economic Journal, 39 (1929), 41–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Since then, of course, it has been extensively developed, as well as subject to empirical tests; a useful review of the relevant literature can be found in Mueller, Public Choice II.
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29 I am grateful to Anthony King for this point.
30 Again a useful review can be found in Mueller, , Public Choice IIGoogle Scholar, especially chap. 13. Aspects of the economic theory of regulation are discussed in Vickers, and Yarrow, , PrivatizationGoogle Scholar, chap. 4, and in Part 2 of Stigler, , ed., Chicago Studies in Political Economy.Google Scholar
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