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Foreign Influence and Domestic Policy

Toke Aidt1; Facundo Albornoz2; Esther Hauk3

1 University of Cambridge · 2 University of Nottingham, IIEP-BAIRES, UBA, CONICET, and CEPR. · 3 Instituto de Análisis Económico, Move, Barcelona Graduate School of Economics.

Journal of Economic Literature 2021 open access

In an interconnected world, economic and political interests inevitably reach beyond national borders. Since policy choices generate external economic and political costs, foreign state and non-state actors have an interest in influencing policy actions in other sovereign countries to their advantage. Foreign influence is a strategic choice aimed at internalizing these externalities and takes three principal forms: (i) voluntary agreements, (ii) policy interventions based on rewarding or sanctioning the target country to obtain a specific change in policy, and (iii) institution interventions aimed at influencing the political institutions in the target country. We propose a unifying theoretical framework to study when foreign influence is chosen and in which form, and use it to organize and evaluate the new political economics literature on foreign influence along with work in cognate disciplines (JEL D72, D74, F51, F53, P26, P33).

DOI
10.1257/jel.20201481
Volume
59 (2)
Pages
426-487
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref