Political Turnover, Bureaucratic Turnover, and the Quality of Public Services

Author:

Akhtari Mitra1,Moreira Diana2,Trucco Laura3

Affiliation:

1. Airbnb Data Science (email: )

2. Department of Economics, University of California, Davis (email: )

3. Amazon (email: )

Abstract

We study how political turnover in mayoral elections in Brazil affects public service provision by local governments. Exploiting a regression discontinuity design for close elections, we find that municipalities with a new party in office experience upheavals in the municipal bureaucracy: new personnel are appointed across multiple service sectors, and at both managerial and non-managerial levels. In education, the increase in the replacement rate of personnel in schools controlled by the municipal government is accompanied by test scores that are 0.05–0.08 standard deviations lower. In contrast, turnover of the mayor’s party does not impact local (non-municipal) schools. These findings suggest that political turnover can adversely affect the quality of public services when the bureaucracy is not shielded from the political process. (JEL D72, D73, H75, H76, J45, O17)

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference78 articles.

1. Akhtari, Mitra, Diana, Moreira, and Laura Trucco. 2022. "Replication Data for: Political Turnover, Bureaucratic Turnover, and the Quality of Public Services." American Economic Association [publisher], Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]. https//doi. org/10.3886/E127001V1.

2. Alvas, Camila, Matteo Bobba, Gianmarco Leon, Christopher Neilson, and Marco Nieddu. 2019. "Teacher Wages, Student Achievement, and the Recruitment of Talent in Rural Peru." Unpublished.

3. Vouchers for Private Schooling in Colombia: Evidence from a Randomized Natural Experiment

4. Social Incentives in Organizations

5. Improving Police Performance in Rajasthan, India: Experimental Evidence on Incentives, Managerial Autonomy, and Training

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