Interest Groups and Regulatory Capture
Document Type
Contribution to Book
Journal/Book Title/Conference
The Oxford Handbook of Public Choice
Volume
1
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication Date
2-11-2019
First Page
585
Last Page
603
Abstract
Economic orthodoxy before 1971 suggested that regulatory intervention could improve on market outcomes in cases of market power, negative spillover effects, or asymmetric information. That orthodoxy was overturned in 1971 with the publication of George Stigler’s “Theory of Economic Regulation,” which concludes that regulatory agencies are vulnerable to capture by special interest groups who shape regulatory outcomes in ways that benefit the regulated industry itself at consumers’ expense. Many empirical studies have since then confirmed Stigler’s theoretical insights. This chapter summarizes the major theoretical and empirical contributions to the literature on economic regulation, provides an overview of the various groups that can capture the regulatory process, and summarizes more recent contributions highlighting regulation’s regressive effects and the “revolving door” between regulatory agencies and regulated firms.
Recommended Citation
Shughart, William F. II and Thomas, Diana W., "Interest Groups and Regulatory Capture" (2019). Economics and Finance Faculty Publications. Paper 989.
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/econ_facpubs/989