This article tests the role of governing parties in budgetary policy in Canada. Using federal expenditure data in policy domains related to defence, economic and social policies, we estimate party effects on government spending since 1965. Results suggest that, holding other variables constant, a partisan effect exists in most policy domains under study. Furthermore, multipartyism tends to impact the role of parties in public spending.
AndersonCameron (2006) ‘Economic Voting and Multilevel Governance: A Comparative Individual-Level Analysis', American Journal of Political Science50: 449–63.
2.
Austen-SmithDavidBanksJeffrey (1988) ‘Elections, Coalitions, and Legislative Outcomes', American Journal of Political Science82: 405–22.
3.
BashevkinSylvia (2002) Welfare Hot Buttons: Women, Work, and Social Policy Reform. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
4.
BaumgartnerFrank R.JonesBryan D. (1993) Agendas and Instability in American Politics. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
5.
BlaisAndréBlakeDonaldDionStéphane (1993) ‘Do Parties Make a Difference? Parties and the Size of Government in Liberal Democracies', American Journal of Political Science37: 40–62.
6.
BlaisAndréBlakeDonaldDionStéphane (1996). ‘Do Parties Make a Difference? A Reappraisal’, American Journal of Political Science40: 40–62.
7.
BlaisAndréKimJiyoonFoucaultMartial (2010) ‘Public Spending, Public Deffcits and Government Coalitions', Political Studies58: 829–46.
8.
BlaisAndréBodetMarc André (2006) ‘Does Proportional Representation Foster Closer Congruence Between Citizens and Policy Makers?’Comparative Political Studies39: 1243–62.
9.
BlomberBrock S.HessGregory D. (2003) ‘Is the Political Business Cycle for Real?’Journal of Public Economics87: 1091–121.
10.
BreunigChristian (2003) ‘Distributions of Budget Changes in Germany, The United Kingdom, and the United States', Western Political Science Association Annual Meeting.
11.
CairnsAlan C. (1977) ‘The Government and Societies of Canadian Federalism’, Canadian Journal of Political Science10: 695–725.
12.
CameronDavid R. (1978) ‘The Expansion of the Public Economy: A Comparative Analysis', American Journal of Political Science72: 1243–61.
13.
CartyKenneth R. (1992) Canadian Political Party System: A Reader. Peterborough: Broadview Press.
14.
CartyKenneth R.CrossWilliam P.YoungLisa (2000) Rebuilding Canadian Party Politics. Vancouver: UBC Press.
15.
CastlesFrancis G. (ed.) (1982). The Impact of Parties: Politics and Policies in Democratic Capitalist States. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
16.
CastlesFrancisMcKinlayRichard D. (1979) ‘Public Welfare Provision, Scandinavia, and the Sheer Futility of the Sociological Approach to Politics', British Journal of Political Science9: 157–71.
17.
ClarkeHarold D.JensonJaneLeDucLawrencePammettJon H. (1984) Absent Mandate: The Politics of Discontent in Canada. Toronto: Gage Publishing.
18.
CohenMichael D.MarchJames G.OlsenJohan P. (1972) ‘A Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice’, Administrative Science Quarterly17: 1–25.
19.
ComiskeyThomas (1983) ‘Electoral Competition and the Growth of Public Spending in 13 Industrial Democracies, 1950 to 1983’, Comparative Political Studies26: 350–74.
20.
CoxGary W. (1987) The Efficient Secret. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
21.
CoxGary W. (1997) Making Votes Count: Strategic Coordination in the World’s Electoral Systems. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
22.
CusackThomas R. (1997) ‘Partisan Politics and Public Finance: Changes in Public Spending in the Industrialized Democracies, 1955–1989’, Public Choice91: 375–95.
23.
CutrightPhilips (1965) ‘Political Structure, Economic Development, and National Security Programs', American Journal of Sociology70: 537–50.
24.
DahlRobert A. (1956) A Preface to Democratic Theory. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
25.
DavisOtto A.DempsterM. A. H.WildavskyAaron (1966) ‘A Theory of the Budgetary Process', American Journal of Political Science60: 529–47.
26.
DevineDonald D. (1970) The Attentive Public: Polyarchical Democracy. Chicago, IL: Rand-McNally.
27.
DochertyDavid (1997) Mr. Smith Goes to Ottawa. Vancouver: UBC Press.
28.
DownsAnthony (1957) An Economic Theory of Democracy. New York: Addison-Wesley.
DuvergerMaurice (1954) Les Partis Politiques. Paris: Armand Collin.
31.
DyeThomas R. (1966) Politics, Economics, and Public Policy: Policy Outcomes in the American States. Chicago, IL: Rand-McNally.
32.
EpsteinLeon D. (1983) ‘The Scholarly Commitment to Parties', in FinifterAda W. (ed.) Political Science: The State of the Discipline. Washington, D.C.: APSA.
33.
FlanaganTom (2007) Harper’s Team: Behind the Scenes in the Conservative Rise to Power. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
34.
FranksC. E. S. (1987) The Parliament of Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
35.
FranzeseRobert S. (2002) Macroeconomic Policies of Developed Democracies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
36.
FreesEdward W. (2004) Longitudinal and Panel Data: Analysis and Applications in the Social Sciences. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
37.
FreyBruno (1978) ‘Politico-Economic Models and Cycles', Journal of Public Economics88 (350): 203–20.
38.
FriedmanMilton (1971) ‘Government Revenue from Inflliation’, Journal of Political Economy79: 846–56.
39.
GoldenbergEddie (2006) The Way It Works Inside Ottawa. Toronto: McLelland and Stewart.
40.
HallerbergMarkBasingerScott (1998) ‘Internationalization and Changes in Tax Policy in OECD Countries', Comparative Political Studies31: 321–53.
41.
HicksAlexanderSwankDuane H. (1984) ‘On the Political Economy of Welfare Expansion: A Comparative Analysis of 18 Advanced Capitalist Democracies', Comparative Political Studies17: 81–121.
42.
HoboltSara Binzer (2007) ‘Taking Cues on Europe? Voter Competence and Party Endorsements in Referendums on European Integration’, European Journal of Political Research46: 151–82.
43.
ImbeauLouis M.PétryFrancoisLamariMoktar (2001) ‘Left–Right Party Ideology and Government Policies: A Meta-Analysis', European Journal of Political Research40: 1–29.
44.
JohnsonWilliam (2006) Stephen Harper and the Future of Canada. Toronto: Douglas Gibson Books.
45.
KemanHans (2002) ‘Policy-Making Capacities of European Party Government’, in LutherKurt R.Müller-RommelFerdinand (eds) Political Parties in the New Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
LijphartArendt (1971) ‘Comparative Politics and Comparative Method’, American Journal of Political Science65: 682–93.
48.
LijphartArendt (1994) Electoral Systems and Party Systems: A Study of Twenty-Seven Democracies 1945–1990. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
49.
LindblomCharles E. (1959) ‘The Science of “Muddling Through”’, Public Administration Review19: 79–88.
50.
MadisonJames (1787) Paper 10, in PoleJ. R. (ed.) The Federalist. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett (2005).
51.
NordhausWilliam D. (1975) ‘The Political Business Cycle’, Review of Economic Studies42: 169–90.
52.
OatleyThomas (1999) ‘How Constraining is Capital Mobility? The Partisan Hypothesis in an Open Economy’, American Journal of Political Science43: 1003–27.
53.
OwensJeffrey (1990) ‘Tax Reform in OECD Countries: Objectives and Achievements', in Taxation and International Capital Flows. Paris: OECD.
54.
PowellG. BinghamJr. (2000) Elections as Instruments of Democracy. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
55.
RahnWendy M. (1993) ‘The Role of Partisan Stereotypes in Information Processing about Political Candidates', American Journal of Political Science37: 472–96.
56.
RiceTom W. (1986) ‘The Determinants of Western European Government Growth’, Comparative Political Studies19: 233–59.
57.
RogoffKennethSibertAnne (1988) ‘Elections and Macroeconomic Policy Cycles', Review of Economic Studies1: 1–16.
58.
RogowskiRonaldKayserMark Andreas (2002) ‘Majoritarian Electoral Systems and Consumer Power: Price-Level Evidence from the OECD Countries', American Journal of Political Science46: 526–39.
59.
RoseRichard (1984) Do Parties Make a Difference? New York: Chatham House.
60.
SartoriGiovanni (1976) Parties and Party System: A Framework for Analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
61.
SavoieDonald (1999) Governing from the Centre. Toronto: Toronto University Press.
62.
SchattschneiderElmer E. (1942) Party Government. New York: Rinehart.
63.
SchmidtManfred G. (1996) ‘When Parties Matter: A Review of the Possibilities and Limits of Partisan Influence on Public Policy’, European Journal of Political Research30: 155–83.
64.
SimpsonJeffrey (2001) The Friendly Dictatorship. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.
65.
SolanoPaul L. (1983) ‘Institutional Explanation of Public Expenditure among High Income Democracies', Public Finance34: 565–98.
66.
SorokaStuart N.WlezienChristopher (2005) ‘Opinion Representation and Policy Feedback: Canada in Comparative Perspective’, Canadian Journal of Political Science37: 531–59.
67.
SorokaStuart N.WlezienChristopher (2010) Degrees of Democracy: Politics, Public Opinion and Policy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
68.
StimsonJames A.MackuenMichael B.EriksonRobert S. (1995). ‘Dynamic Representation.’American Journal of Political Science89(3): 543–565.
69.
StromKaareBudgeIanLaverMichael. (1994). ‘Constraints on Cabinet Formation in Parliamentary Democracies.’American Journal of Political Science38(2): 303–335.
70.
SwankDuane. (1988). ‘The Political Economy of Government Domestic Expenditure in the Affluent Democracies, 1960-1980.’American Journal of Political Science32(4): 1120–1150.
71.
SwankDuane (2002) Global Capital, Political Institutions, and Policy Change in Developed Welfare States. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
72.
TufteEdward (1978) Political Control of the Economy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
73.
WildavskyAaron (1964) The Politics of the Budgetary Process. Boston, MA: Little, Brown.
74.
WilenskiHarold L. (1975) The Welfare State and Equality. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
75.
WlezienChristopher (1995) ‘The Public as Thermostat: Dynamics of Preferences for Spending’, American Journal of Political Science39: 981–1000.