Research Activities

PIEP: Political Institutions and Economic Policy
May 13, 2006
This is closed to the public.

This invitation-only conference is sponsored by the Research Program in Political Economy, the Center for Globalization and Governance, and the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies. It is being held at Princeton.

Over the past 25 years, two separate strands of research in political economy have developed. The first is the rigorous analysis of the impact of political institutions on political behavior and political outcomes. The second is the analysis of the making of economic policy, which has tried to develop theoretically consistent and empirically grounded explanations of economic policy outcomes. Typically, they have developed entirely segregated from each other&mdsash;the analysis of political institutions without concern for economic policymaking implications, and the study of economic policymaking with limited attention to the institutional environment in which it takes place. The goal of these conferences is to encourage the development of an approach to politics and policymaking that is theoretically rigorous and empirically systematic with regard to both political institutions and economic factors.

Field of Interest: Political Economy
Conference Chair
Milner, Helen V.
B. C. Forbes Professor of Politics and International Affairs; Chair, Department of Politics; Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
Romer, Thomas
Professor of Politics and Public Affairs; Director, Research Program in Political Economy; Faculty Chair, MPP Program, Princeton University