Arbeitspapier

Informational boundaries of the state

Formal conceptions of state capacity have mostly focused on indirect measures of state capacity - by, for instance, using the state's fiscal or extractive capacity as a proxy for its overall capacity. Yet, this input or extractive view of state capacity falls short, especially since cross-country empirical evidence suggests that similar levels of fiscal capacity, measured by tax revenues as a percentage of GDP, can produce starkly different outputs - both in classic economic terms and in broader terms that citizens would recognize as desirable outcomes, including quality of life, health, security, equality of opportunity, and intergenerational mobility. This paper argues that a central step towards addressing these shortcomings of the conventional view is to account for a crucial and largely ignored boundary of the state or dimension of state capacity: its capacity to gather, process, and deploy information in its conduct of fiscal policy. Specifically, we study how the presence or lack of such informational capacity constrains governments in responding to crises, such as the recent energy price shock. Our framework provides the analytical toolkit to examine how the informational boundary of the state shapes the incentives for policymakers to resort to untargeted and/or distortionary policy instruments, as opposed to targeted and non-distortionary ones, in responding to crises. The policy response to the energy crisis following the invasion of Ukraine provides the empirical context upon which we bring this theoretical framework to bear on data, though the latter can be straightforwardly extended to other recent crises.

Language
Englisch

Bibliographic citation
Series: ECONtribute Discussion Paper ; No. 282

Classification
Wirtschaft
Structure, Scope, and Performance of Government
Institutions and Growth
Equity, Justice, Inequality, and Other Normative Criteria and Measurement
Bureaucracy; Administrative Processes in Public Organizations; Corruption
Energy: Government Policy
Capitalist Systems: Political Economy
Single Equation Models; Single Variables: Cross-Sectional Models; Spatial Models; Treatment Effect Models; Quantile Regressions
Large Data Sets: Modeling and Analysis
Subject
state capacity
economic development
carbon taxation
political economy
pork-barrel politics

Event
Geistige Schöpfung
(who)
Fetzer, Thiemo
Shaw, Callum
Edenhofer, Jacob
Event
Veröffentlichung
(who)
University of Bonn and University of Cologne, Reinhard Selten Institute (RSI)
(where)
Bonn and Cologne
(when)
2024

Last update
10.03.2025, 11:44 AM CET

Data provider

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Object type

  • Arbeitspapier

Associated

  • Fetzer, Thiemo
  • Shaw, Callum
  • Edenhofer, Jacob
  • University of Bonn and University of Cologne, Reinhard Selten Institute (RSI)

Time of origin

  • 2024

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