Advocates of parliamentary rule have been highly critical of presidentialism for dividing powers and providing the opportunity for gridlock between branches. Fixed executive terms can saddle publics with ineffectual leaders who are not easily removed. Yet the great theorists of presidential rule, beginning with the Federalists, saw very different qualities in the same institutions: a desirable combination of strong leadership with checks on executive discretion. These diverse assessments arise because we have surprisingly little comparative work on how presidential democracies function. The introductory essays in this volume lay the theoretical groundwork for such comparative analysis. Drawing on detailed cases of economic policymaking in Asia, Latin America, and Central Europe, this book shows the diversity of presidential systems and isolates the effects of presidentialism from other factors that influence public policy, such as party systems. In doing so, it casts doubt on the critics of presidential rule and underscores the continuing vitality of this particular form of democratic rule.
This book offers a comparative perspective on how presidential democracies make public policy.Reviews'Presidents, Parliaments, and Policy constitutes a major contribution to the rich field of comparative political economy and the contribution of institutional design and constitutional engineering to effective democratic governance. It is an essential reading for all those policy makers and researchers seeking to understand how institutions and incentives shape economic policy in presidential systems.' Democratization
Book InformationISBN 9780521774857
Author Stephan HaggardFormat Paperback
Page Count 378
Imprint Cambridge University PressPublisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 497g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 21mm