The impact of majority coalitions on local government spending, service delivery, and corruption in Indonesia

Date

2018

Authors

Lewis, Blane
Hendrawan, Adrianus

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

This study examines the impact of majority coalitions on local government spending, service delivery, and corruption in Indonesia. The investigation finds that majority coalitions, i.e. those coalitions for which participating political parties control greater than half of council seats, cause a shift in local government spending towards health sector activities and induce improvements in citizen health service access—but only for a year or two, after which the positive effects disappear. The study shows that budget fraud starts to become problematic in the last two years of the coalition's life. Majority coalition support for the local health spending and service agenda dissipates quickly as attention turns to corrupting the budget, via increased infrastructure outlays and associated rent-seeking. We hypothesize that budget fraud serves, in part, to finance subsequent rounds of local parliamentary and executive elections.

Description

Keywords

Majority coalitions, Local government spending and service, delivery, Corruption, Regression discontinuity, Indonesia

Citation

Source

European Journal of Political Economy

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31