Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
969378 Journal of Public Economics 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

We compare centralized and decentralized policy making in a federation in which policy heterogeneity is inherently costly and preferences vary across jurisdictions: all jurisdictions agree that some harmonization is desirable but no one agrees on the direction of harmonization. This type of collective choice problem arises when members of a federal system have to coordinate nonbudgetary policies such as laws, regulations, standards, or diplomatic policies. Contrary to the common wisdom, decentralization becomes optimal when coordination becomes very important. When coordination costs are symmetric, decentralization dominates centralization irrespective of the magnitude of externalities and the heterogeneity of preferences. In the case of discontinuous network effects, standardization never Pareto dominates decentralization.

Research Highlights► We compare centralization and decentralization in a heterogeneous federation. ► Interjurisdictional externalities make policy heterogeneity inherently costly. ► We show that decentralization becomes optimal when externalities become large. ► When coordination externalities are symmetric, decentralization dominates centralization. ► In the case of network effects, centralization never dominates decentralization.

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