The Political Economy of International Unions

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP3117

Authors: Alberto F. Alesina; Ignazio Angeloni; Federico Etro

Abstract: We model an international union as a group of countries deciding together the provision of certain public goods and policies because of spillovers. The countries are heterogeneous either in preferences and/or in economic fundamentals. The trade-off between the benefits of coordination and the loss of independent policymaking endogenously determines the size, the composition and the scope of unions. Our model implies that the equilibrium size of the union is inversely related to the degree of heterogeneity between countries and to the spectrum of common policies. Hence, there is a trade-off between enlargement and deepening of coordination: a union involved in too many collateral activities will be favoured by few countries, while a union which focuses on a core of activities will be favoured by many countries. The political equilibrium implies a bias toward excessive centralization and small size of the union, however. This bias can be corrected if there is a constitutional commitment of the union to centralize only certain policies.

Keywords: European Union; Federalism; Political Economy; Subsidiarity

JEL Codes: D78; H11; H41


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
increased heterogeneity (F12)smaller union size (J51)
expectation of policy centralization (D73)smaller union size (J51)
characteristics of prospective members (C52)union's composition (J51)

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