Is Regulatory Convergence Efficient? CES Germany & Europe Working Papers, No. 02.3, May 1992


Autoria(s): de Beus, Jos
Data(s)

1992

Resumo

One of the important themes in the new institutionalism is the convergence of market regulations in a world with three powerful clusters of countries (Western Europe, North America, and East Asia) on a small number of regimes, like disorganized capitalism, free market capitalism, and coordinated market capitalism. This paper examines the political-economic theory of regulatory convergence. It reconstructs and compares three welfarist approaches: the optimal regulatory regime (Tinbergen), the rule of constitutional law (Buchanan), and regulatory rivalry (Hayek). The paper concludes that most plausible results of convergence theory are completely opposite to the expressed political intentions of the theorists. Tinbergen's theory predicts neoliberalism, not social democracy. The theories of Buchanan and Hayek predict respectively a consensual or spontaneous formation of corporatist regulations, not the return of classical constitutionalism or liberalism. The paper summons new institutionalists to repair the weak scientific elements of convergence theory and to make a distinction between the ideological origins of this theory and its unintended ideological consequences.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aei.pitt.edu/63697/1/PSGE_WP2_3.pdf

de Beus, Jos (1992) Is Regulatory Convergence Efficient? CES Germany & Europe Working Papers, No. 02.3, May 1992. [Working Paper]

Relação

https://ces.fas.harvard.edu/#/publications/working_papers/151

http://aei.pitt.edu/63697/

Palavras-Chave #regulations/regulatory policies
Tipo

Working Paper

NonPeerReviewed