Working Paper

Co-Partisan Buddies or Partisan Bullies? Why State Supervision of Local Government Borrowing Fails

Felix Rösel
ifo Institut, München, 2014

Ifo Working Paper No. 189

In many federal countries, local governments run large deficits, even when supervision by state authorities is tight. I investigate whether party alignment of mayors and supervisors influences local government borrowing. The dataset includes 427 local German governments over the period 1999–2012. I exploit variation of a far-reaching institutional reform that entirely re-distributed political powers on both debt issuance and supervision. The results show that short-term deficits of local governments are not enabled by a vertical “buddy” relationship between a mayor and a supervisor affiliated with the same party (co-partisanship) but rather by an ideological “bully behavior” of partisan supervisors and supervisees: left-wing local governments issue more debt, while left-wing supervisory authorities tolerate more debt. These findings imply that political independence for state supervisory authorities is highly recommended.

Schlagwörter: Local government, public deficits, supervision, partisan cycle
JEL Klassifikation: H620, H740, H770