Educational Business Cycles: The Political Economy of Teacher Hiring across German States, 1992-2004

Markus Tepe, Pieter Vanhuysse

Research output: Working paperResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Strong institutional constraints and better-informed voters may lead re-election seeking incumbents to shift the use of political business cycle mechanisms away from monetary and fiscal policy towards other policy domains that are more easily manipulable, targetable, and timeable. We investigate teacher employment patterns at the state level in Germany and find strong evidence of cycling mechanisms, in the form of electioneering and honeymooning. Against a backdrop of a continuously shrinking total teachers' pool, German state-level incumbents accelerate the hiring of new teachers during election periods and partly reverse this during politically safer points in the electoral cycle. Cycles are mediated by issue salience: heightened attention to German public schooling after the notorious PISA-2000 tests further strengthens the manipulation of new teacher hiring for electoral purposes.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationNew Haven
PublisherYale University Leitner Program in International and Comparative Political Economy Working Paper Series
Edition24
Publication statusPublished - 2007
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Public Education, Teacher Employment, Political-Economic Cycles, German Federalism, Electioneering, Honeymooning

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Educational Business Cycles: The Political Economy of Teacher Hiring across German States, 1992-2004'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this