Prof. Barry Weingast                                                                                                           Department of Political Science

x3-0497 (chair’s office); x3-3729 (Hoover)                                                                        Stanford University

email: weingast@leland.stanford.edu                                                                               Spring 2000

 

 

 

PS 206W: The New Economics

 Of Organization for Political Science

 

 

The purpose of this course is to apply the New Economics of Organization to questions central to political scientists and students of political-economy.  Although much of the logic was developed by studying problems of markets, firms, and contracting, this approach applies to a far wider range of problems.  The focus throughout the course will be on institutions, their evolution, their purpose, and their stability.  The course will develop a unified approach and apply it to a wide range of topics.

 

         Course structure.  The course opens with an examination of the basic logic of the approach. Because no integrated treatments of theory exist, it is necessary to learn the approach through the major papers on a set of disparate topics.  Of necessity, this requires focusing in part on markets and firms. Thus, this section begins with the theory of the firm, focusing on the issue of the separation of ownership and control.  Because delegation to managers potentially allows for managerial discretion, the institutions of the firm are designed to mitigate this effect.

 

Having developed the theoretical building blocks, we turn to politics. The first application concerns political institutions in modern America. We will cover at least two topics: (a) Congress: the literature demonstrates that congressional institutions are designed to further the goals of congressmen, and that they are well suited for this purpose. Yet why do they choose specific institutions and not others? We will see that the logic used in the classic statements of this approach, e.g., Fenno (1961) and Mayhew (1974), parallels that developed in the theory of the firm. (b) Delegation to bureaucrats by politicians closely parallels the issue of delegation to managers by shareholders. Although the institutions designed to mitigate bureaucratic discretion greatly differ from those for managers, their purpose is the same:  to limit the ex post discretion potentially exercised by delegates, in this case, bureaucrats.

 

A second set of applications concerns the evolution of political institutions in a historical perspective. We will cover some subset of the following: (a) The institutions underpinning the organization of trade prior to the rise of the nation state, that is, prior to the rise of third party enforcement of contracts by the state; (b) a comparative study of English and French institutions during their 125 year rivalry from 1689-1815.

 

 

An third application turns to problems in comparative politics: democracy and democratic stability; and commitment problems as the central political impediment to economic and political development.

 

A fourth topic concerns self-enforcing political stability. We first look at various approaches to federalism. In our last class, we turn to the break down of American political stability in the Civil War. The thesis concerning the American Civil War focuses on the credible commitment by the North to honor rights in slaves throughout the early to mid-19th century.  The formation of the Republican Party, though not abolitionists, meant the demise of the North's credible commitment.  Secession occurred as soon as the Republicans had captured all the relevant agenda mechanisms (both houses of Congress and the Presidency), leaving the South with no credible promise that its rights in slaves would be maintained.

 

         Course requirements: (1) Students are required to read all the material; be ready to summarize each paper in a cogent paragraph; and participate in class discussion. Although I rarely call on particular students, I expect each student to be prepared to begin the discussion of each reading with a short description of the main question and finding. If discussions do not arise naturally, I will assign students responsibility for leading a discussion of particular works.

 

(2) Writing. Students are required to write a major research paper that applies the logic developed in the course to a topic of their choice.  The paper is due on the Monday, June 5. We will discuss format, length, and research for the paper in class. Quality of exposition matters! This is a firm due date, and I rarely grant exceptions. If you can’t meet this deadline, please don’t take this class.

 

As a further note: In past years, students from have produced papers that were ultimately published. I hope you will become sufficiently interested to pursue your paper beyond the class.

 

         Two final notes:  First, the reading list contains far more readings and topics than can be covered in one quarter. We will therefore read a selected subset, as indicated by an asterisk (*). I provide the longer list for two reasons: (a) to suggest further readings on the topics covered and on related topics that are not covered; (b) to provide a set of suggestions for paper topics. Second, the readings are not designed to be representative of the major approaches found in particular fields (e.g., comparative politics). Instead, they are intended to show how the approach to institutions developed in the course can illuminate issues central to the field.

 


Course Outline:

 

(Readings are indicated by a *)

 

 

I.  Institutions in Politics, Economics, and History (Class 1)

 

              Suggestions for further readings

 

       Alchian (1950) "Uncertainty, Evolution, and Economic Theory"

       Kreps (1990) "Corporate Culture" in Alt and Shepsle.

               Milgrom, North, and Weingast (1988) "The Law Merchant." Ec and Pol

 

       Axelrod (1984) The Evolution of Cooperation

       Axelrod (1986) "The Evolution of Cooperation Among Egoists"

       Greif, Milgrom, and Weingast (1994) "The Merchant Guild" JPE

       Knight (1992) Institutions and Social Conflict

             Milgrom and Roberts (1992) Economics, Organization, and Management

       North (1972) "Markets and other Allocation Systems in History"

North (1991) Institutions, Institutional Change, and Economic Performance.

 

 

 

II.  Theory of Institutions:

 

       A. Class 2:

 

 

       *Dixit and Nalebuff (1991) “Credible Commitments” in Thinking Strategically

       *Shepsle (1991) "Discretion, Institutions, and the Problem of Government Commitment"   

       *Stiglitz (1998) “The Private Uses of Public Interests: Incentives and Institutions.” J. of Economic Perspectives

 

       B. Class 3: Theory of the firm; Separation of Ownership and Control

 

             *Klein, Crawford, and Alchian (1978) "Vertical Integration and Appropriable Quasi-Rents." JLE

       *Kreps (1990) “Corporate Culture” in Alt and Shepsle

           *Milgrom, North, and Weingast (1988) "The Law Merchant." Ec and Pol

 

 

 

              Suggestions for further readings

 

             Alchian and Demsetz (1972) "Production, Information Costs, and Economic Organization."

       Barzel (1990) Economic analysis of Property Rights.

       Coase (1937) "The Nature of the Firm"

       Coase (1960) "The Problem of Social Cost." JLE

       Demsetz (1982) "Economic, Legal, and Political Dimensions of Competition."

       Greif, Milgrom, and Weingast (1994) "The Merchant Guild" JPE

       Holmstrom and Milgrom (1991) "Multi-Task Principal-Agent Analysis"

       Jensen and Meckling (1976) "The Theory of the Firm." JFE

             Klein and Leffler (1981) "The Role of Market Forces in Assuring Contractual Performance."

       Milgrom (1988) "Employment Contracts, Influence Activities, and Efficient Organization Design"

       Milgrom, North, and Weingast (1988) "The Law Merchant." Ec and Pol

Milgrom and Roberts (1992) Economics, Organization, and Management

       Milgrom and Roberts (1990) “Influence Costs” in Alt and Shepsle.

North (1991) Institutions

       North (1993) "Credible Commitments" JITE

       Ostrom (1990) Governing the Commons

       Tirole (1986) "Hierarchies" JLEO

       Williamson (1985) The Economic Institutions of Capitalism.

       Williamson (1996) Governance

 

 

 

III.  Political Organization: American Politics

 

       A.  Class 4: Congressional institutions

 

       *Calvert (1995) “The rational choice theory of social institutions

*Cox and McCubbins (1993) Legislative Leviathan: Parties and Committees in the US House of Representatives.

       *Weingast & Marshall (1988) "Industrial Organization of Congress" JPE

 

 

              Suggestions for further readings

 

       Aldrich (1995) Political Parties

             Banks and Calvert (1991) "Communication and Efficiency in Coordination Games

       Fenno (1961) "Appropriations Process as a Political System"

       Ferejohn (1986) "Food Stamps"

Fiorina (1989) Congress: Keystone of the Washington Establishment (2nd ed.)

       Gamm (1998) Urban Exodous

Kiewiet and McCubbins (1991) The Logic of Delegation

       Krehbiel (1991) Information Based Rationales for Congressional Organization

       Laver and Shepsle (1994) Making and Breaking Governments

       Mayhew (1974) Congress: The Electoral Connection

             Shepsle and Weingast (1987) "Institutional Foundations of Committee Power" APSR

       Shepsle and Weingast (1995) Positive Theories of Congressional Institutions

       Weingast (1979) "Rational Choice Perspective on Congressional Norms" AJPS

       Weingast (1991) "Fighting Fire with Fire."

 

 

       B.  Class 5: Bureaucratic Institutions:

 

       *McCubbins, Noll, and Weingast (1999) “Political Origins of the APA”

       *Milgrom and Roberts (1990) “Influence Costs” In Alt and Shepsle

       *Moe (1989) "The Political Structure of Agencies"

 

 

 

              Suggestions for further readings

 

de Figueiredo (1997) “The Structure of Reciprocity”

       Ferejohn Shipan (1989) “Congressional influence on Telecommunications Policy,” in Dodd and Oppenheimer, Congress Reconsidered 4e.

Kiewiet and McCubbins (1990) Logic of Delegation Ch on "Delegation"

             Macey (1992) "Organizational Design and the Control of Administrative Agencies."

McCubbins and Schwartz (1984) "Police Patrols vs. Fire Alarms." AJPS

       Moe (1984) "The New Economics of Organization" AJPS

       Moe (1990) "The Politics of Structural Choice."

       Noll (1985) "Administrative Behavior"

       Niskanen (1971) Bureaucracy and Representative Government

             Snider and Weingast (1995) "The American System of Shared Powers: Congress, the President, and the NLRB"

       Weingast (1984) "Congressional-Bureaucratic System"

       Wilson (1980) "Politics of Regulation"

 

              Additional topics of interest (not covered in class)

 

       C.  The presidency

 

             Bailey, Goldstein, and Weingast (1997) "The Origins of American Trade Policy: Rules, Coalitions, and International Politics" World Politics

       Cameron (1997) Presidential Vetoes

Kiewiet and McCubbins (1991) The Logic of Delegation

       Moe (1990) "The Institutionalized presidency"

 

D.  Parties

 

       Aldrich (1995) Why Parties? The Origin and Transformation of Party Politics in America.

       Baron (19**)

       Cooper and Brady (1988) Parties

       Cain Ferejohn Fiorina (1987) Personal Vote (Ch 1,9)

Cox and McCubbins (1993) Legislative Leviathan: Parties and Committees in the US House of Representatives.

       Kohno (1997) Japan’s Postwar Party Politics

       Krehbiel (199*) “Where’s the Party?” British J. of Pol. Sci.

       Ramseyer & Rosenbluth (1992) The Political Marketplace

      

       E.  Political machines:

 

       Caro (1974) Power Broker

       Inman and Rubinfeld (1979) "Judicial Pursuit of Local Fiscal Equity" Harvard Law Rev.

       Kreps (1990) "Corporate Culture" in Alt and Shepsle, eds.,

       Miller (1981) Cities by Contract

 

 

       F.  Macroeconomic Credibility

 

       Alesina and Drazen (1991) "Why are stabilizations delayed" AER.

       Alesina and Tabellini (1988) "political cycles"

       Drazen (2000) Political Economy in Macroeconomics

       Kydland and Prescott. 1977. “Rules Rather than Discretion: The Inconsistency of Optimal Plans,” JPE

       Lohmann (1988) "Delegation to a Monetary Authority"

Lohmann, (1996) "Federalism and Central Bank Autonomy: The Politics of German Monetary Policy, 1960-1989"

Persson and Svensson (1989) “Why a Stubborn Conservative Would Run a Deficit: Policy with Time-Inconsistent Preferences.” QJE

Persson and Tabelini (1994) Monetary and Fiscal Policy

       Sargent (1986) "Post-WWI Hyperinflations"

       Sargent (1998) Conquest of American Inflation

             Sargent and Velde (1994) “Macroeconomic causes and consequences of the French Revolution” JPE

 

 

 

IV.  Evolution of Political Institutions in a Historical Perspective: Europe

 

       Class 6:  England vs. France in Early Modern Europe (1689-1815).

 

             *Root (1989) "Tying the King's Hands: Credible Commitments And Royal Fiscal Policy During the Old Regime." Rationality and Society

             *North and Weingast (1989) "Constitutions and Commitment: Evolution of Institutions Governing Public Choice in 17th-Cent. England" J. Ec History

 

 

              Suggestions for further readings

 

       Bein (1987) "The Uses of Privilege under The Ancien Regime."

       Brewer (1990) Sinews of Power.

       Hoffman (1994) "Taxes, Fiscal Crises, and Representative Institutions: The Case of Early Modern France" in Hoffman and Norbert (1994)

       Hoffman and Norbert (1994) Fiscal Crises, Liberty, and Representative Government, 1450-1789

       Hoffman and Rosenthal (1997) "The political-economy of absolutism reconsidered"

       Maitland (1909) Constitutional History of England

       North (1981) Structure and Changes

       North (1990) Institutions, Institutional Change

             Root (1994) The Fountain of Privilege: Institutional Innovation and Social Change in Old Regime France and England

             Sargent and Velde (1994) “Macroeconomic causes and consequences of the French Revolution” JPE

 

 

 

              Additional topics of interest (not covered in class)

 

              1.  Institutions underpinning the organization of trade: Markets and states in medieval Europe

 

       Greif (1994) "Cultural Beliefs and the Organization of Society"

       Greif (1997) "Podesta"

Greif, Milgrom, and Weingast (1994) “Coordination, Commitment, and Enforcement: The Case of the Merchant Guild” JPE

       Pirenne (1925) Medieval Cities, ch. 6

 

       DeRoover (1963) "Organization of Trade [in Medieval Europe]"

       Fox (1971) History in Geographic Perspective

       Greif (1989) "Reputations and Coalitions in Medieval Trade."

       Lopez (1981) Commercial revolution in the middle ages

       Milgrom, North and Weingast (1988) "Law Merchant" Ec and Pol

       Root (1994) Fountain of Privilege

 

             2.  Feudal organization:

 

       Fenoaltea (1975) "The Rise and Fall of a Theoretical Model: The Manorial System"

       Goubert (1973) The Ancient Regime

       North and Thomas (1973) Rise of the Western World

       North (1981) Structure and Change

       Root (1989) "Tying the King's Hands" Rationality and Society

       DeTocqueville, L'Ancien Regime

 

       3. State Building and Military Technology:

 

       Bean (1973) "War and the Birth of Nations." J of Ec History

       Cipolla (1965) Guns and Sails

       Kennedy (1988) The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers.

       McNeill (1982) Pursuit of Power

       Parker (1990) The Military Revolution

 

       4.  Political Foundations of Sovereign Debt

 

       Conklin (1993) MS on Spain

       Eaton, Gersovitz and Stiglitz (1986) "Pure Theory of Country Risk"

       Hoffman and Rosenthal (1995) "Historical Lessons for development: the European Experience"

       Levi (1988) Of Rule and Revenue

Lipson (1988) "International Organization of Third World Debt" in Bates, Towards a Political economy of International Debt

       Weingast (1997) "Political Foundations of Limited Government: Sovereign Debt,” in Drobak and Nye, forthcoming.

 

 


                        5.  The Rise of Representative Institutions:

 

       Haggard and Kaufman (1995) Democratic Transitions

       Karl (1986) "Pacts"

       North (1994) [history of liberty MS]

       North and Weingast (1989) "Constitutions and Commitment" J Ec History

       Pirenne (1915) Democracy in the Low Countries

       Putnam (1983) Making Democracy Work

       Schultz and Weingast (1996) "The Democratic Advantage"

       Waley (1988) The Italian City Republics

       Weingast (1997) "The Political Foundations of Democracy and the Rule of Law" APSR

 

 

 

V.  Commitment Problems in Comparative Politics

 

       Class 7: Democracy

 

       *Przeworski (1991) Democracy and the Market Ch 1.

       *Weingast (1997) "Political Foundations of Democracy and the Rule of Law" APSR

 

       Class 8: Development

 

       *Fiorina and Noll (1978) “Voters, Legislators and Bureaucrats” J Pub Economics

*Spiller and Wm Savedoff, “Government  opportunism and the performance of enterprises.” ch 1 of: Spilled Water: Political Economy of Water Regulation in Latin America, (1998)

       *Weingast (1995) "The Economic Role of Political Institutions” JLEO

 

 

              Suggestions for further readings on comparative politics

 

       Abernethy (1999) MS on empires.

       Ames (1987) Political Survival

       Almond and Verba (1963) Civic culture

       Amsden (1989) Asia’s Next Giant

       Barnett and Meuller (1974) Global Reach

       Bates (1984) Markets and States in Tropical Africa

             Bates (1983) "Modernization and Ethnic politics" in Oloronsura and Rothchild. State Versus Ethnic Claims: African Policy Dilemmas

       Bates (1988) "Review of the Development Literature" in his essays.

       Campos and Roots (1996) Key to the Asian Miracle

       De Soto (1989) The Other Path

       Diamond (1994) Nationalism, Ethnic Politics, and Democracy

       Ensminger (1992) Making a Market

       Fearon and Laitin (1996) “Explaining Interethnic cooperation” APSR

       Geddes (1994) Politicians’ Dilemma

       Haggard and Kauffman (1995) Democratic Transitions

       Hoffman and Rosenthal (1997) "Historical Lessons for development: the European Experience"

       Horowitz (1985) Ethnic Groups in Conflict

       Kautsky (1982) Traditional Empires, Parts I-II.

       Laitin (1988) “Language Games”

       Laitin (1998) Identity in Formation

       Levi (1988) Of Rule and Revenue

       Lipjhart (1974) Politics of Accommodation

       Litwack (1991) "Legality and Market Reform in Soviet-type economies"

       North (1981) Structure and Change

       North (1987) "England vs. Spain"

       North (1990) Institutions

       North and Thomas (1973) Rise of the Western World

       O'Donnell and Schmitter (1986) Transitions

       Popkin (1978) Rational Peasant

       Putnam (1993) Making Democracy Work

       Rabushka and Shepsle (1972) Politics in Plural Societies

       Rogowski (1987) “Trade and the Variety of Democratic Institutions”

       Rogowski (1988) Commerce and Coalitions

       Rosenthal (1992) Fruits of Revolution

Stiglitz (1998) “The Private Uses of Public Interests: Incentives and Institutions.” J. of Economic Perspectives

       Weingast (1994) "Political Impediments to Economic Reform: Political Risk and Enduring Gridlock"

 

       Corruption:

 

       Campos (1991) "Political Economy of Cronyism"

       Montinola (1992) "Political Foundations of Corruption"

       Shleifer and Vishny (1993) "Corruption" QJE

       Tirole (1992) "Persistence of Corruption"

       Manion (1994) [corruption in China]

 

       Ethnic politics

 

       Fearon (1994) "Ethnic Violence as a commitment problem"

             de Figueiredo and Weingast (1999) "Rationality of Fear”

 

 

 

 

VI.  International Organization:

 

       Axelrod and Keohane (1985) "Achieving Cooperation Under Anarchy"

             Bueno de Mesquita (1988) "Contribution of Expected Utility Theory to the Study of International Conflict."

       Fearon (1996) “Signaling and Commitment in International Politics”

 

 

              Suggestions for further readings

 

       BDM (1997) [New MS]

       Fearon (1990) [MS on international cooperation]

             Greif, Milgrom and Weingast (1990) "Merchant Gilds as a Nexus of Contracts."

       Goldstein (1993) Ideas, Interests, and American Trade Policy

       Keohane (1984) After Hegemony

             Leeds, “Domestic Political Institutions, Credible commitments, and International cooperation,” AJPS 1999.

       Martin (1998) Democratic Commitments

       Milner (1998) [Ms on trade agreements]

       Weingast (1996) "An Endogenous Role for Sovereignty" Politics and Society

       Yarbrough and Yarbrough (1992) Cooperation and Governance in International Trade

 

 

 

VIII. State Building, Constitutions, and Commitment

 

             A.  Constitutions as Self-enforcing Constraints (with applications to political reform in the former communist regimes)

 

              Gibbons and Rutten (1996) “Hierarchical Dilemmas”

             Greif, Milgrom Weingast (1994) "The Merchant Guild”

              Milgrom, North, and Weingast (1989) “The Law Merchant”

 

B. NEO and State-building

 

             Grief (1997) “The Podesta”

             Greif, Milgrom Weingast (1994) "The Merchant Guild”

             North, Summerhill and Weingast (1998) “Order, Disorder and Economic Change: Latin America vs. North America”

 

                    Suggestions for further reading

 

              Persson, Roland, and Tabellini (1996) “Separation of powers”

              Shleifer and Vishny (1993) “Corruption”    

 

       C. Revolution

 

              Ackerman (1992) Liberal Revolution

             Haber and Razo (1998) “political instability and economic performance.”

             Moore (1966) Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy

             Rakove, Rutten, and Weingast (1998) “Ideas, Interests, and Credible Commitments in the American Revolution”

             Sargent and Velde (1992) “Macroeconomic causes and consequences of the French Revolution” JPE

              Skocpol (1979) States and Social Revolutions Ch **

 

 

 

              Suggestions for further readings

 

       Almond and Verba (1963) The Civic Culture

       Boettke (1992) Peristroika, Ch 6.

       Calvert (1992) “Elements of a Theory of society among Rational Actors”

       Hardin (1989) "Why a Constitution?" in Grofman and Wittman

       Litwack (1991) "Legality and Market Reform in Soviet-type economies"   

       Montinola, Qian, and Weingast (1995) "Federalism, Chinese Style" World Politics

Ordeshook (1992) "Constitutions as Self-Enforcing Constraints" Constitutional Political Economy

       Weingast (1997) "The Political Foundations of Democracy and the Rule of Law" APSR

 

              Additional topics of interest

 

       1.  Environmental factors affecting statehood

 

       Bean (1973) "War and the Birth of Nations." JEH

             Casella and Feinstein (1992) "Public Goods in Trade: On the Formation of Markets and Political Jurisdictions"

       Hirschleifer (1994)

       North (1981) Structure and Change, Ch. **

       Olson (1990) "Autocracy, Democracy, and Prosperity" APSR

       Scully (1992) Constitutional Environments and Economic Growth

      

       2.  Logic of Constitutional Constraints:

 

       Buchanan and Brennan (1980, 1985) Power to Tax; and The Reason of Rules

       Elster

       Friedrich (1968) Constitutional Government and Democracy

       Friedrich (1968) Limited Government

       Hayek (1960) Constitution of Liberty

       Holmes

       Helman (1997, 1998)

       Riker (1981) Liberalism vs. Populism (ch 1 and 9)

       Weingast (1988) "Political Institutions and Public Performance in

              Modern America"

 

       3. The historical-institutional approach to state building

 

       Bensel (1994) Yankee Leviathan

       Evans, Rueschemeyer and Skocpol (1985) “Bringing the State Back in”

       Hall and Taylor (1997) [survey of the new institutionalisms]

       Skocpol (1979) Social Revolutions

       Skocpol (1993) Soldiers and Mothers

       Skowronek (1983) Building a New American State

 

 

 


 

IX.  Constitutions, Credible commitments, and Political Stability

 

   A.  Class 9: Federalism

 

             *Diaz, 1999, Federalism in Mexico

             *Iaryczower, Saiegh, and Tommasi, “Coming Together: The Industrial Organization of Federalism”

              *Montinola, Qian, and Weingast (1995) “Federalism, Chinese Style”

 

                    Suggestions for further reading

 

              Bednar, Eskridge, and Ferejohn (1996) "A Political Theory of Federalism"

             Riker (1964) Federalism

             Solnick (1996) “Political economy of Russian Federalism”

 

      

 

   B.  Class 10: The role of institutions in the American Democratic Stability and its break down in Civil War

 

       *Weingast (1997) “Political Stability and the Civil War: Commitment, Institutions, and American Democracy ”

       *Wright (1978, ch 5) "Cotton, Slavery, and the Civil War"

 

 

              Suggestions for further readings

 

       Fogel (1989) Without Consent or Contract

       Fogel and Engerman (1974, 1977) Time on the Cross

       Giennapp (1986) Origins of the Republican Party

       Holt (1981) Political Crisis of the 1850s

       Lee and Passell (1979, ch 10) "Economic Causes of Civil War"

       Potter (1976) The Impending Crisis

       Ransom (1989) Conflict and Compromise

       Riker (1981, ch 9) "Manipulation... The Development of the issue of

             Slavery as a Prelude to the Civil War"

       Robach (1992) An Imaginary Negro in an Impossible Place

       Silbey (1985) Partisan Imperative

       Weingast (1996) Institutions and Political Commitment: A New Political Economy of the American Civil War Era