Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

submittedVersion

Publication Date

9-2021

Abstract

Political dynasties exist in practically every variant of democracy, but take different forms in different places. Yet the types of dynastic structures have remained unexplored. We argue that horizontal dynasties—multiple members from the same political family holding different political offices concurrently— affect policymaking by replacing potential political rivals, who may oppose an incumbent’s policy choices, with a member of the family. But in developing countries, the policy change that accrues from dynastic status may not lead to higher levels of economic development. We test this argument’s implications in the Philippines. Employing a close elections regression discontinuity design on a sample of mayors, we show that (i) horizontally dynastic mayors have higher levels of government spending, (ii) direct institutional constraints are the mechanism that drives this core result, and (iii) horizontally dynastic mayors do not lead to economic growth or lower poverty.

Keywords

Political Dynasties, Economic Policy, Preference Alignment, Political Parties, Regression Discontinuity Design, The Philippines

Discipline

Asian Studies | Political Economy | Political Science

Research Areas

Political Science

Publication

Comparative Political Studies

First Page

1

Last Page

86

ISSN

0010-4140

Publisher

SAGE Publications (UK and US)

Embargo Period

7-14-2021

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