Working Paper

Politics of Randomness

Gil S. Epstein, Shmuel Nitzan
CESifo, Munich, 2002

CESifo Working Paper No. 803

The main drawback of the public-policy contest is that the notion of contest success function, a crucial component of the contest model, does not have micro-foundations and, therefore, the random behavior of the government seems ad-hoc. In the present paper we propose a partial micro-foundation for the public-policy contest. The possible rationalization of random government behavior is illustrated in the case of the all-pay auction and Tullock's lottery logit functions. We also clarify how stake asymmetry, lobbying-skill asymmetry and return to lobbying effort determine the relative desirability, from the government's point of view, of these CSFs

Keywords: interest groups, policy makers, lobbying, public-policy contests, contest success function, rationalization of random government's behavior