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Date

2003-07-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Public Finance Review

Many constitutional political economists argue that the length of time constitutions remain in effect distinguishes constitutional politics from legislative politics. The author explores the role of constitutional durability in a repeated rent-seeking game. A general interest (e.g., consumers) in the game can lobby for a constitutional prohibition that prevents the rent-seeking contest from occurring. A durable constitution can reduce expected rent-seeking expenditures if constitutional politics occurs less frequently than legislative politics, stable rights to receive rents do not exist, and the general interest has a longer time horizon than rent seekers. Under these conditions, general interest lobbying for a constitutional prohibition denies transfers to future rent seekers unable to participate in politics today.

Description

Keywords

Rent seeking, constitutional political economy, rent dissipation

Citation

Sutter, D. (2003). Durable Constitutional Rules and Rent Seeking. Public Finance Review, 31(4), 413-428. doi: 10.1177/1091142103031004004

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