Political accountability and public service delivery in decentralized Indonesia: Incumbency advantage and the performance of second term mayors
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Lewis, Blane
Nguyen, Hieu
Hendrawan, Adrianus
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Elsevier
Abstract
To what extent do voters hold local elected leaders accountable for public service delivery in
fiscally and politically decentralized environments, as theory suggests should be the case? We
examine political accountability and service delivery in subnational Indonesia, through the lens of
mayoral incumbency advantage. We apply regression discontinuity methods to a unique data set
on local elections to identify the causal impact of incumbency on election outcomes and relate
those effects to changes in citizen access to local public services. We find that voters in Indonesia
are, in general, very willing to return incumbents to office compared to their counterparts in other
countries. We also determine that the incumbent advantage is conditional on advances in local
service provision: as service access expands more quickly, voters are more likely to vote incumbents back into office. Finally, we find that electorally successful incumbents—second term
mayors—spend substantially less on education and health and more on infrastructure, manage
their budgets less prudently, and deliver public services neither more nor less effectively than their
first term equivalents. We conjecture that term limits and the attendant lack of electoral incentives
leads to the disappointing second-term mayor performance.
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European Journal of Political Economy
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2037-12-31
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