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No Exaggeration: Truthfulness in the Lobbying of Government Agencies by Competing Interest Groups

Title
No Exaggeration: Truthfulness in the Lobbying of Government Agencies by Competing Interest Groups
Author
강형구
Keywords
FEDERAL ADVISORY COMMITTEES; ORGANIZED INTERESTS; PUBLIC-POLICY; INFORMATION; POLITICS; REDISTRIBUTION; BUSINESS; SURPLUS; AUCTION; DESIGN
Issue Date
2013-10
Publisher
Cambridge Univ Press
Citation
Japanese Journal of Political Science, 2013, 15(4), P.499-520
Abstract
Intense competition can compel lobbyists to exaggerate the benefits the government would see in tax returns and social welfare if agency officials allocate such resources to the lobbyist's members. This incentive to misrepresent grows when information asymmetry exists between lobbyists and government officials. A large body of literature has investigated how interest groups compete and interact, but it disregards the interdependency of interests between competing groups and associated strategic behaviors of other players. Our signaling model of lobbying reveals ways in which agency officials can compel lobbyists for competing interests to lobby truthfully and what the policy implications of this compulsion can be. We also present case-study evidence of how this works in practice.
URI
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/japanese-journal-of-political-science/article/no-exaggeration-truthfulness-in-the-lobbying-of-government-agencies-by-competing-interest-groups/23E9DC5A46FEDE293CBE5A4753E4BEE3http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11754/53198
ISSN
1474-0060
DOI
10.1017/S1468109913000248
Appears in Collections:
GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS[S](경영전문대학원) > ETC
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