Paper
Opportunistic political cycles and social spending: an examination of transition and consolidated democracies in Latin America
Autor
Barberia, Lorena Guadalupe
Avelino Filho, George
Institución
Resumen
In this paper, we show that education, health and social security expenditures did not increase during elections. Based on a panel of fifteen Latin American democracies from 1973 to 2000, we show that there are important increases in social spending in the inaugural year of a new presidential administration. We argue that social policy is used by Latin American democracies as an instrument to reward voters after winners enter office and not as a tool to manipulate outcomes before elections as commonly argued in the literature.