On the Inevitability of Divided Government and Improbability of a Complete Separation of Powers
This paper provides a tightly written overview and modest extension of the constitutional exchange and evolution model developed in Perfecting Parliament and uses that approach to analyze the division of authority that one would expect to see in contempo-rary constitutional governments. The analysis suggests that constitutions tend to be written, based on the king and council template, and buttressed by a more or less independent court system. Moreover, it suggests that constitutions change at the margin through time as constitutional bargaining takes place. This suggests that a complete separation of power is unlikely to be observed in the long run. Empirical evidence developed from the IAEP data base is consistent with these predictions.
Year of publication: |
2013-08
|
---|---|
Authors: | Congleton, Roger D. |
Institutions: | Department of Economics, College of Business and Economics |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
The Contractarian Constitutional Political Economy of James Buchanan
Congleton, Roger D., (2013)
-
The Louis-Schmelling Paradox and the League Standing Effect Reconsidered
Humphreys, Brad R., (2014)
-
Adaptive Learning and Information Diffusion
Guse, Eran, (2011)
- More ...