ABSTRACT

Political dysfunction culminates in political institutions' increasing difficulty in generating reliable informational feedback and hence the erosion of mechanisms for correcting errors. Seminal theories of political dysfunction are those of Madison and Tocqueville. This chapter provides an overview of constitutional drift as rooted in constitutional bargains among political elites. Understanding this bargaining process is necessary to set the stage for analyzing currently existing governance institutions and hence political dysfunction. The chapter focuses on developing the theory of political dysfunction proper, showing its necessary relation to feedback erosion that follows from the "tragedy of the commons" in governance. As an illustration of the theory, it considers the case of fiscal imbalances in the American republic, showing how these imbalances are simply one way in which political dysfunction manifests. The chapter concludes by discussing some implications of the theory, as well as the costs and benefits of some possible remedies.