Pantelis Kammas, Maria Poulima, Vassilis Sarantides
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Investing in the roots of your political ancestors
We use regional data for Greece between 1975–1989 to demonstrate a disproportionate allocation of public investment funds to prefectures that exhibited stronger support for the incumbent party. Our main empirical evidence comes from an Instrumental Variables (IV) analysis that exploits the discontinuity in Greece's political landscape after a brief military junta (1967–1974) to link the parties established after 1974 with their ancestors from the same 'political family' during the pre-dictatorial era. In particular, we show that the electoral strength of political ancestors influences the allocation of public investment. Moreover, there is a strong association between the political support of ancestor and descendant parties, both of which influence the allocation of public investment in prefectures with many core supporters. We also present evidence indicating that the appointment of deputy ministers from loyal prefectures of the incumbent party plays a significant mediating role in the allocation of public investment to prefectures with a strong base of core supporters.
期刊介绍:
INTERNATIONAL TAX AND PUBLIC FINANCE publishes outstanding original research, both theoretical and empirical, in all areas of public economics. While the journal has a historical strength in open economy, international, and interjurisdictional issues, we actively encourage high-quality submissions from the breadth of public economics.The special Policy Watch section is designed to facilitate communication between the academic and public policy spheres. This section includes timely, policy-oriented discussions. The goal is to provide a two-way forum in which academic researchers gain insight into current policy priorities and policy-makers can access academic advances in a practical way. INTERNATIONAL TAX AND PUBLIC FINANCE is peer reviewed and published in one volume per year, consisting of six issues, one of which contains papers presented at the annual congress of the International Institute of Public Finance (refereed in the usual way). Officially cited as: Int Tax Public Finance