A transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential action

Presidents have two major assets at their disposal when seeking to alter policy: executive orders and legislative action. There are certain advantages and disadvantages to each course. Although presidency scholars have focused extensively on presidential efforts in the legislative arena, little atte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marchbanks, Miner Peek, III
Other Authors: Wood, B. Dan
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3127
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-31272013-01-08T10:38:03ZA transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential actionMarchbanks, Miner Peek, IIIExecutive OrdersPresidentTransaction CostsPresidents have two major assets at their disposal when seeking to alter policy: executive orders and legislative action. There are certain advantages and disadvantages to each course. Although presidency scholars have focused extensively on presidential efforts in the legislative arena, little attention has been paid to how a president affects policy through direct action. Because executive orders have been under-researched, there has been a dearth of theory development that adequately explains when presidents will act unilaterally through executive orders and when they will instead seek legislative avenues to policy change. This project develops a parsimonious theory grounded in the transaction costs framework that explains how a president chooses between seeking congressional action versus acting unilaterally through executive orders to accomplish policy change. The theory holds that when presidents desire policy change, they balance the transaction costs executive orders and legislative action present, selecting the course that presents the greatest benefit after accounting for the transaction costs present. After outlining the theory, I test my predictions using an original data set. Each executive order from 1946 to 2004 was read and examined for policy content. Unlike most prior studies of presidential use of executive orders, this study only includes orders that affect policy in the data analyses. The series of empirical tests provide support for my theory: Presidents consider the transaction costs that executive orders and the pursuit of legislation pose and take the action that maximizes their utility when seeking policy changeTexas A&M UniversityWood, B. Dan2006-04-12T16:02:58Z2006-04-12T16:02:58Z2005-122006-04-12T16:02:58ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext1215062 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3127en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Executive Orders
President
Transaction Costs
spellingShingle Executive Orders
President
Transaction Costs
Marchbanks, Miner Peek, III
A transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential action
description Presidents have two major assets at their disposal when seeking to alter policy: executive orders and legislative action. There are certain advantages and disadvantages to each course. Although presidency scholars have focused extensively on presidential efforts in the legislative arena, little attention has been paid to how a president affects policy through direct action. Because executive orders have been under-researched, there has been a dearth of theory development that adequately explains when presidents will act unilaterally through executive orders and when they will instead seek legislative avenues to policy change. This project develops a parsimonious theory grounded in the transaction costs framework that explains how a president chooses between seeking congressional action versus acting unilaterally through executive orders to accomplish policy change. The theory holds that when presidents desire policy change, they balance the transaction costs executive orders and legislative action present, selecting the course that presents the greatest benefit after accounting for the transaction costs present. After outlining the theory, I test my predictions using an original data set. Each executive order from 1946 to 2004 was read and examined for policy content. Unlike most prior studies of presidential use of executive orders, this study only includes orders that affect policy in the data analyses. The series of empirical tests provide support for my theory: Presidents consider the transaction costs that executive orders and the pursuit of legislation pose and take the action that maximizes their utility when seeking policy change
author2 Wood, B. Dan
author_facet Wood, B. Dan
Marchbanks, Miner Peek, III
author Marchbanks, Miner Peek, III
author_sort Marchbanks, Miner Peek, III
title A transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential action
title_short A transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential action
title_full A transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential action
title_fullStr A transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential action
title_full_unstemmed A transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential action
title_sort transaction cost approach to unilateral presidential action
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3127
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