Publication: Dissolution power, confidence votes, and policymaking in parliamentary democracies
Loading...
Date
2019-03-01
Authors
Advisor
Court
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SAGE
Defense Date
Metrics
Citation

Abstract
There is striking variation across parliamentary democracies in the power of prime ministers to employ two prominent procedures to resolve legislative conflict: the vote of confidence and the dissolution of parliament. Whereas previous contributions in comparative politics have investigated each of these two fundamental institutions in isolation, I develop a simple unified model to unbundle how this richer variety of institutional configurations shapes political bargaining over policy. The analysis clarifies that the effects of the confidence vote and dissolution power interact. As a consequence, there can be a non-monotonic effect of increasing prime ministers’ formal power on their ability to shape the policy compromise. Counterintuitively, introducing dissolution power makes the prime minister worse off under some conditions. These results suggest new directions for empirical research on the consequences of parliamentary institutions for legislative politics and policy. They also lay analytical foundations for explaining institutional variation and reforms.
Unesco subjects
License
Attribution 4.0 International
School
IE School of Politics, Economics & Global Affairs
Center
Keywords
Citation
Becher, M. (2019). Dissolution power, confidence votes, and policymaking in parliamentary democracies. Journal of Theoretical Politics, 31(2), 183-208. https://doi.org/10.1177/0951629819833182