Publication: Regulatory Quality Under Imperfect Oversight
Date
2007
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Ethan Bueno de Mesquita & Matthew Stephenson, Regulatory Quality Under Imperfect Oversight, 101 Am. Pol. Sci. Rev. 605 (2007).
Research Data
Abstract
We analyze the positive and normative implications of regulatory oversight when the policymaking agency can improve the quality of regulation through effort, but only some kinds of effort are observable by the overseer, and the overseer's only power is the ability to veto new regulation. Such oversight can increase the quality of agency regulation, but it also introduces inefficiencies—the agency underinvests in unobservable effort and overinvests in observable effort. Agencies have no incentive to conceal their activities from the overseer; the reforms that are likely to reduce inefficiency are therefore those that improve overseer expertise or lower the costs of agency disclosure, not those that compel disclosure. The normative implications depend on the relative severity of bureaucratic drift and slack problems. When slack is paramount, an overseer that is more anti-regulation than the agency or society improves social welfare, as long as it does not deter the agency from regulating entirely. When drift is paramount, oversight improves social welfare only when it deters regulation. In this case, regulatory oversight is weakly dominated by one of two alternatives: eliminating oversight or banning regulation.
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
Terms of Use
Metadata Only