Economic Politics in the United States: The Costs and Risks of Democracy, Second Edition

William R. Keech

2013

Cambridge University Press

Employing macroeconomic performance as a lens to evaluate democratic institutions, political scientist Keech uses models of political behavior that allow for opportunism on the part of public officials and shortsightedness on the part of voters to see if democratic institutions lead to inferior macroeconomic performance. We have learned more about how and why democracy can work well or badly in the years since the first edition was published.

It was not previously apparent how much the good performance of democracy in the U.S. was contingent on informal rules and institutions of restraint that are not part of the definition of democracy. Since that first edition, the U.S. has experienced soaring indebtedness, unintended adverse consequences of housing policy, and massive problems in the financial system. Each of these was permitted or encouraged by the incentives of electoral politics and by limitations on government, the two essential features of democratic institutions.