info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Government Turnover and External Financial Assistance
Fecha
2023Autor
Gago, Andrés
Abad, José María
Bermejo, Vicente J.
Carozzi, Felipe
Institución
Resumen
We study the political incentives shaping governments’ decisions to seek assistance from
a lender of last resort. We propose that re-elected incumbents are more reluctant than newly
elected governments to request assistance, as this action reveals negative information about
their past performance. We first provide cross-country descriptive evidence that a change
in office is indeed associated with a larger probability of receiving assistance from the IMF.
Next, to obtain causal evidence, we analyze the decisions made by 4,000 Spanish municipalities
following a credit shock during the Great Recession. Regression-discontinuity estimates
showthat newly elected local executiveswere approximately 30 percentage points more likely
than re-elected incumbents to publicly agree on a financing program with the national government.
Using data from press reports, electoral results and a survey on politicians’ views,
we show that many re-elected incumbents avoided requesting a public bailout to protect their
image, even though this decision was financially suboptimal.