Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
970764 The Journal of Socio-Economics 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

While the tradeoff between market failure and government failure has been explored both theoretically and in practical policy design, the question of whether this trade-off appears in the calculus of citizens’ demands for government regulation remains underexplored. We first clarify the channels through which concerns for market failure, as proxied by trust in market participants, and concerns for government failure, as proxied by perceptions of corruption, jointly affect individuals’ demand for government regulation. We then investigate these effects empirically, using data from post-socialist countries. Our analysis confirms the previously established result that trust has a negative effect on demand for regulation. Perceived corruption, however, affects demand for regulation primarily via a negative interaction effect with trust. Our findings suggest that, in post-socialist countries, both concerns for market failure and concerns for government failure are indeed in citizens’ minds and that concerns about the anticipated ‘grabbing-hand’ effect from government involvement are particularly salient.

► We study demand for government regulation through the lens of the tradeoff between market failure and government failure. ► We then investigate individuals’ demand for regulation empirically, using data from post-socialist countries. ► Concerns for market failure and concerns for government failure are indeed in citizens’ minds. ► Concerns about the anticipated ‘grabbing hand’ effect from government involvement are particularly salient.

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