This setting lets you change the way you view articles. You can choose to have articles open in a dialog window, a new tab, or directly in the same window.
Open in Dialog
Open in New Tab
Open in same window
Open in New Tab
Open in same window

Journal of Economic Perspectives: Vol. 6 No. 3 (Summer 1992)
JEP Volume. 6, Issue 3 |
Previous ArticleNext Article
Sign up for Email Alerts Follow us on Twitter
Full-text Article (Complimentary)
View Comments on This Article (0) | Login to post a comment
Previous ArticleNext Article
Expand
Quick Tools:
Print Article Summary Email Link to this Article Export CitationSign up for Email Alerts Follow us on Twitter
Explore:
Predatory versus Productive Government: The Case of U.S. Agricultural Policies
Article Citation
Rausser, Gordon C. 1992. "Predatory versus Productive Government: The Case of U.S. Agricultural Policies."
Journal of Economic Perspectives,
6(3): 133-157.
DOI: 10.1257/jep.6.3.133
DOI: 10.1257/jep.6.3.133
Abstract
This essay will argue that agricultural policy in the United States has led to both the enhancement of efficiency through "productive policies" and the transfer of wealth and income to special interests through redistributive or "predatory policies." These two activities can be labeled as PESTs and PERTs. PEST policies, or political-economic-seeking transfers, are meant to redistribute wealth from one social group to another and are not explicitly concerned with efficiency. In contrast, PERTs, or political-economic resource transactions, are intended to correct market failures or to provide public goods; these policies have neutral distributional effects, at least in design. A review of the history of public policy in agriculture reveals not only tension between the PERT and PEST roles of the public sector, but also some coordination between these two types of activities. As different interest groups pressure the political process, the government trades off PESTs and PERTs in its attempts to acquire, balance, and secure political power. At times this has led to combinations of programs that appear incoherent. In such a world, the challenge for economists is to design and advocate policies that are both economically productive and politically sustainable.
Article Full-Text Access
Full-text Article (Complimentary)
Authors
Rausser, Gordon C. (U CA, Berkeley)
JEL Classifications
Q18: Agricultural Policy; Food Policy
D72: Models of Political Processes: Rent-seeking, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior
D72: Models of Political Processes: Rent-seeking, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior
Comments
View Comments on This Article (0) | Login to post a comment

