Abstract
Previous research has emphasized corporate lobbying as a pathway
through which businesses influence government policy. This article
examines a less-studied mode of influence: private regulation,
defined as voluntary efforts by firms to restrain their own
behavior. We argue that firms can use modest private regulations as
a political strategy to preempt more stringent public regulations.
To test this hypothesis, we administered experiments to three groups
that demand environmental regulations: voters, activists, and
government officials. Our experiments revealed how each group
responded to voluntary environmental programs (VEPs) by firms.
Relatively modest VEPs dissuaded all three groups from seeking more
draconian government regulations, a finding with important
implications for social welfare. We observed these effects most
strongly when all companies within an industry joined the voluntary
effort. Our study documents an understudied source of corporate
power, while also exposing the limits of private regulation as a
strategy for influencing government policy.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
80 articles.
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