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Polycentric Governance and the Theory of Budget Constraints: Do the Conditions of Money and Credit Compromise the Compound Republic?

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dc.contributor.author Kravchuk, Robert S.
dc.date.accessioned 2019-06-04T14:30:41Z
dc.date.available 2019-06-04T14:30:41Z
dc.date.issued 2019 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10535/10463
dc.description.abstract "I address whether polycentric governance can survive the implicit threat posed by a monetarily-sovereign federal government. The question turns on whether, and when, 'hard- and soft-budget constraints' apply to a given government’s finances. The limits to government spending are argued to be a function of a government’s access to money and credit. Drawing on the work of Kornai (1992), McKinnon (1992, 1997), Vickrey (1996), Wray (2011), Mosler (2009) and Weingast (1995), “soft” budget constraints embody direct and indirect means of financing expenditure (i.e., “backdoor”, off-budget, or shift-able expenditures and/or risk). Monetarily sovereign central governments have clear advantages in their ownership of a central bank, which has the ability to create money at will, and their ability to issue debt denominated in the their own fiat-credit money. Central governments thus face 'ultra-soft' budget constraints, having no effective limit to their ability to issue money, credit, and debt. States and localities face budget constraints similar to those of households and firms. Central governments, even in a strong federal or polycentric systems of governance, are predicted to become the dominant players. The current institutional structure of the compound republic may have no effective checks with which to balance incursions of monetarily-sovereign federal governments." en_US
dc.language English en_US
dc.subject polycentricity en_US
dc.subject budgets en_US
dc.title Polycentric Governance and the Theory of Budget Constraints: Do the Conditions of Money and Credit Compromise the Compound Republic? en_US
dc.type Conference Paper en_US
dc.type.published unpublished en_US
dc.type.methodology Case Study en_US
dc.subject.sector General & Multiple Resources en_US
dc.identifier.citationconference Workshop on the Ostrom Workshop 6 en_US
dc.identifier.citationconfdates June 19-21, 2019 en_US
dc.identifier.citationconfloc Indiana University, Bloomington en_US


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