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How policy agendas change when autocracies liberalize: the case of Hong Kong, 1975‐2016

How policy agendas change when autocracies liberalize: the case of Hong Kong, 1975‐2016
How policy agendas change when autocracies liberalize: the case of Hong Kong, 1975‐2016
This article considers how autocrats decide to expand or narrow the issue diversity of their policy agenda during a period of political liberalization. Prior studies have two competing perspectives. First, political liberalization increases the social and political freedom that enhances information exchange, and thus expands issue diversity. Second, political liberalization decreases government's control of the legislature and thus narrows the issue diversity. This article offers a novel theoretical perspective by combining these two countervailing theories. It predicts a diminishing marginal benefit of information exchange and an increasing marginal bargaining cost. As such, this article argues that issue diversity follows a negative quadratic (inverted‐U) relationship as the regimes liberalize. The analysis of a new and unique dataset of Hong Kong's legislative agenda (1975 to 2016) offers support for this theory. This study contributes to our knowledge of policymaking in authoritarian regimes and the theory of information processing.
0033-3298
926-941
Or, Nick H.K.
f49d5a87-3ed2-442c-a58e-a05f9ed4e7f9
Or, Nick H.K.
f49d5a87-3ed2-442c-a58e-a05f9ed4e7f9

Or, Nick H.K. (2019) How policy agendas change when autocracies liberalize: the case of Hong Kong, 1975‐2016. Public Administration, 97 (4), 926-941. (doi:10.1111/padm.12602).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article considers how autocrats decide to expand or narrow the issue diversity of their policy agenda during a period of political liberalization. Prior studies have two competing perspectives. First, political liberalization increases the social and political freedom that enhances information exchange, and thus expands issue diversity. Second, political liberalization decreases government's control of the legislature and thus narrows the issue diversity. This article offers a novel theoretical perspective by combining these two countervailing theories. It predicts a diminishing marginal benefit of information exchange and an increasing marginal bargaining cost. As such, this article argues that issue diversity follows a negative quadratic (inverted‐U) relationship as the regimes liberalize. The analysis of a new and unique dataset of Hong Kong's legislative agenda (1975 to 2016) offers support for this theory. This study contributes to our knowledge of policymaking in authoritarian regimes and the theory of information processing.

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Accepted/In Press date: 22 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 May 2019
Published date: 23 December 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 430739
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430739
ISSN: 0033-3298
PURE UUID: b8f1fcaa-7efe-4755-b139-2daaf3181002
ORCID for Nick H.K. Or: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7020-2455

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Date deposited: 10 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 01:47

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Author: Nick H.K. Or ORCID iD

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