Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5068092 European Journal of Political Economy 2014 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Study of the link between the diffusion of the press and spending decisions•The press diffusion constrains electoral distortions of public expenditures.•The distortion is shaped by the fiscal and electoral reform implementation.•The results, robust to other categorizations of journals, verify the predictions.•The local press is more effective than the national press.

This paper studies the link between the diffusion of news and spending decisions. We exploit a dataset of Italian Regions from 1984 to 2008, approximate the spread of information with the diffusion of newspapers, and estimate the effect of the news before and after 1995. In fact, in the mid-90s two reforms introduced the direct election of the governor, autonomous taxing powers and incentives for fiscal discipline at the regional level in Italy. We test the following hypotheses, derived from the theoretical literature: 1) the diffusion of newspapers affects public expenditures close to elections; 2) the more newspapers are diffused, the larger is the reduction of the electoral cycle; 3) before the reform were implemented, the diffusion of newspapers constrained the increased size of expenditures by reducing the positive variation of capital expenditures; 4) after the reform were implemented, the diffusion of newspapers leaves unaffected the size of expenditures by reducing both the positive variation of capital expenditures and the negative variation of current expenditures. The empirical analysis confirms the expectations; the results, moreover, are robust to alternative categorizations of the press and indicate a larger effectiveness of the diffusion of local press.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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