Shared Mandates, Moral Hazard, and Political (Mis)alignment in a Decentralized Economy
Date issued
Mar 2015
Subject
Transparency and Anticorruption;
Public Utility;
Public Service;
Municipal Management;
Wastewater Treatment;
Sewerage;
Sanitation Service;
Decentralization
JEL code
H40 - Publicly Provided Goods: General;
H54 - Infrastructures • Other Public Investment and Capital Stock;
H72 - State and Local Budget and Expenditures;
P48 - Political Economy • Legal Institutions • Property Rights • Natural Resources • Energy • Environment • Regional Studies
Country
Brazil
Category
Working Papers
This paper investigates the effects of political (mis)alignment on public service delivery when mandates are shared between state and local governments. We analyze sewage treatment policies in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. Relying on difference-in-differences estimations, we establish a causal relationship between political alignment and higher sewage treatment provision. Conceptually, we find that, with uncertain local commitment and weakly enforceable local obligations, shared mandates lead to a moral hazard issue implying service under-provision. Our results show that political alignment attenuates such moral hazard effects.
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