Buy-in for Buyouts: Attitudes Toward Compensation for Reforms
Vincent Arel-Bundock and
Krzysztof Pelc
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Vincent Arel-Bundock: Université de Montréal
No 6nctb, OSF Preprints from Center for Open Science
Abstract:
Political reforms are often impeded by concentrated interest groups who lobby to block change that would benefit the majority. One under-examined policy response is to compensate the recalcitrant group in exchange for agreeing to the reform. We refer to such mass compensation schemes as public buyouts. After laying out the theoretical case for and against buyouts, we design a series of survey experiments to gauge the determinants of public support for buyouts linked to three reforms---phasing out coal energy, simplifying tax filing, and amnesty for dictators. Partisanship appears systematically related to attitudes towards buyouts, as does program design: buyouts find significantly more favour when they target individual workers, rather than companies. Yet the chief objection to buyouts is normative: individuals' "moral aversion" to compensating actors who hold up beneficial reforms dominates other salient concerns, like moral hazard. Our results also highlight a vexing credibility problem: those who support reform also support reneging on the compensation once the reform is passed. Recipients may thus be right to fear policy reversals. Buyouts appear democratically viable as a means of passing beneficial reforms that have been blocked for decades---yet their design proves decisive.
Date: 2024-09-17
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ene
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:osfxxx:6nctb
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/6nctb
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