Datensatz: Replication Data for: Who Can Reform the Labor Market? : IMF Conditionality, Partisanship and Labor Unions
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Labor market reforms are critical for economic growth. Yet, they are politically contentious and governments, more often than not, are faced with strong opposition from interest groups. Scholarly work shows that governments often rely on external intervention to implement politically difficult reforms. This is the case with the IMF which typically conditions its financing on the implementation of required reforms. Do borrowing governments benefit from IMF programs to overcome domestic opposition to reform by organized interests? Utilizing a unique new dataset on IMF conditionality, we show that partisan and electoral concerns, and domestic alliances strongly affect the implementation of labor market reforms, even when the IMF imposes them. When faced with increasing number of strikes, left-wing governments are more likely to implement labor market reforms than center/right wing governments. However, the left is less likely than the center/right to fulfill its international commitments during election years when labor groups are militant. These findings highlight the left’s unique ability to form pro-reform coalitions and the IMF’s conditional role in removing domestic political opposition to reform. Counter-intuitively, right wing governments still struggle to reform the labor market, even during economic crises and under IMF programs.
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GUNAYDIN, Hakan, 2018. Replication Data for: Who Can Reform the Labor Market? : IMF Conditionality, Partisanship and Labor UnionsBibTex
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<dcterms:abstract>Labor market reforms are critical for economic growth. Yet, they are politically contentious and governments, more often than not, are faced with strong opposition from interest groups. Scholarly work shows that governments often rely on external intervention to implement politically difficult reforms. This is the case with the IMF which typically conditions its financing on the implementation of required reforms. Do borrowing governments benefit from IMF programs to overcome domestic opposition to reform by organized interests? Utilizing a unique new dataset on IMF conditionality, we show that partisan and electoral concerns, and domestic alliances strongly affect the implementation of labor market reforms, even when the IMF imposes them. When faced with increasing number of strikes, left-wing governments are more likely to implement labor market reforms than center/right wing governments. However, the left is less likely than the center/right to fulfill its international commitments during election years when labor groups are militant. These findings highlight the left’s unique ability to form pro-reform coalitions and the IMF’s conditional role in removing domestic political opposition to reform. Counter-intuitively, right wing governments still struggle to reform the labor market, even during economic crises and under IMF programs.</dcterms:abstract>
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