Abstract
This paper attempts a rational explanation of the big stylized facts that were the hallmark of the socialist economies: high investment rates, high levels of environmental depletion and defense expenditure. In contrast to the dominant approach in comparative economics, which relies on bureaucratic and/or political preferences, a simple median-voter model yields this structure of national output as the utility-maximizing choice of a decisive voter faced with a redistribution of income that takes the form of collectivization of capital accumulation, whose burden is borne more than proportionally by higher-income groups. This basic model is then extended to deal with different specifications of the political process, different degrees of centralization of decision-making, and the territorial dimension of redistribution.
| Lingua originale | Inglese |
|---|---|
| pagine (da-a) | 257-280 |
| Numero di pagine | 24 |
| Rivista | European Journal of Political Economy |
| Volume | 15 |
| Numero di pubblicazione | 2 |
| DOI | |
| Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - giu 1999 |
| Pubblicato esternamente | Sì |