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The Political Economy of Regulation: Origins, Distortions, and the Case for Deregulation

Author

Listed:
  • Tomás Marotta

    (Universidad de San Andrés)

  • Tomás Pacheco

    (Universidad de San Andrés)

  • Abigail Riquelme

    (Universidad de San Andrés)

  • Martín Rossi

    (Universidad de San Andrés)

  • Federico Sturzenegger

    (Universidad de San Andrés)

Abstract

We examine how well-intentioned regulations often produce adverse economic and institutional consequences. While regulation can address market failures, it frequently evolves into a tool for rent-seeking, exclusion, or symbolic overreach. Using case studies from Argentina’s deregulation process, we show how rigid or discretionary rules can reduce competition, increase prices, and distort incentives. Beyond these partial-equilibrium effects, we examine whether deregulation can generate broader, economy-wide impacts through institutional channels. Argentina’s economy-wide deregulation provides a unique setting to assess these systemic effects. We document a marked post-reform decline in corruption indicators relative to comparable countries, consistent with the idea that simplifying rules and reducing regulatory discretion can lower rent-extraction opportunities and improve institutional performance at scale. Taken together, the findings underscore the need for responsible deregulation: a reform agenda focused on removing unjustified barriers, curbing discretion, and restoring state capacity through evidence-based, transparent, and regularly reviewed regulatory frameworks.

Suggested Citation

  • Tomás Marotta & Tomás Pacheco & Abigail Riquelme & Martín Rossi & Federico Sturzenegger, 2025. "The Political Economy of Regulation: Origins, Distortions, and the Case for Deregulation," Working Papers 175, Universidad de San Andres, Departamento de Economia, revised Dec 2025.
  • Handle: RePEc:sad:wpaper:175
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    File URL: https://webacademicos.udesa.edu.ar/pub/econ/doc175.pdf
    File Function: First version, December 2025
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