The Institutional Sources of Economic Transformation: Insulation and Compensation in the Politics of Energy Transitions

  • Jared J. Finnegan (Contributor)
  • Phillip Y. Lipscy (Creator)
  • Jonas Meckling (Creator)
  • Florence Metz (Creator)
  • Jared J. Finnegan (Contributor)

Dataset

Description

Why are some governments more effective in promoting economic change than others? We develop a theory of the institutional sources of economic transformation. Institutions can facilitate transformation through two central mechanisms: insulation and compensation. The institutional sources of transformation vary across policy types—whether policies impose costs primarily on consumers (demand-side policies) or on producers (supply-side policies). Proportional electoral rules and strong welfare states facilitate demand-side policies, whereas autonomous bureaucracies and corporatist interest intermediation facilitate supply-side policies. We test our theory by leveraging the 1973 oil crisis, an exogenous shock that compelled policymakers to simultaneously pursue transformational change across industrialized countries. Evidence from the generalized synthetic control method, case studies, and discourse network analysis support our hypotheses. The findings have important implications for contemporary transformations including climate change policy and low-carbon transitions.
Date made available26 Dec 2024
PublisherHarvard Dataverse

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