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SMU SOE Seminar (October 12, 2023): Partisan Cleavages and Public Good Provision. Evidence from Inter-Jurisdictional Cooperation in Law Enforcement in Mexico

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Partisan Cleavages and Public Good Provision. Evidence from Inter-Jurisdictional Cooperation in Law Enforcement in Mexico

We study how partisan politics affects inter-jurisdictional cooperation and the quality of public good provision in federal systems. We look at law enforcement in Mexico, a country characterized by high levels of violent crime and strong partisan cleavages. Exploiting a Regression Discontinuity Design in close municipal elections, we find that municipalities in which the party in power in the neighboring municipalities barely wins are more likely to cooperate with their neighbors in the area of law enforcement than those in which it barely lost. The effect is stronger in periods of widespread violence when the returns to cooperation are higher. Improved cooperation due to party-alignment, in turn, leads to more effective crime prevention and a significant decline in homicide rates. This effect is sizable and robust, and it increases as the share of neighboring municipalities governed by the same party increases. Moreover, it is independent of which party governs the neighboring municipalities, which party was the incumbent, or which party won the election, and it does not appear to be driven by improved cooperation with either federal or state authorities. Taken together, our findings indicate that, in the presence of geographical spillovers, favoring horizontal cooperation may be an effective way of improving the provision of local public goods, but that partisan divisions can interfere with this process.
Click here to view the CV.

Ruben Durante

National University of Singapore 
Political Economy
Media Economics
Public Economics

12 October 2023 (Thursday)

4pm - 5.30pm

Meeting Room 5.1, Level 5
School of Economics
Singapore Management University
90 Stamford Road
Singapore 178903