How do firms feel about participation by their peers in the regulatory design process? An online survey experiment testing the substantive change and spillover mechanisms
Abstract
This paper examines two concerns with calls for increased participation by firms in
the government design of regulations in emerging markets. First, given the profit
maximization goals of firms, can the benefits of business participation be realized
without weakening the social protections that regulations are meant to offer? Second,
can resource-constrained states realistically use consultation programs to influence
the behavior of enough relevant firms to achieve a reasonable breadth of social protection?
We explore these understudied questions through an online survey experiment involving
121 firm managers in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. We find that firms prompted to think
about worker safety favored regulatory changes that arose from suggestions by other
firms over those resulting from suggestions by chemical safety experts even when unaware
of the involvement of either source in the design process. By contrast, firms prompted
to focus on business success did not express significant support for revisions suggested
by either firms or experts. Learning about the participation of fellow firms positively
influenced views about the legitimacy of the state's regulatory authority but not
of the focal regulation itself.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25976Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1287/stsc.2019.0084Publication Info
Malesky, E; & Taussig, M (2019). How do firms feel about participation by their peers in the regulatory design process?
An online survey experiment testing the substantive change and spillover mechanisms.
Strategy Science, 4(2). pp. 129-150. 10.1287/stsc.2019.0084. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25976.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Edmund Malesky
Professor of Political Science
Malesky is a specialist on Southeast Asia, particularly Vietnam. Currently, Malesky's
research agenda is very much at the intersection of Comparative and International
Political Economy, falling into three major categories: 1) Authoritarian political
institutions and their consequences; 2) The political influence of foreign direct
investment and multinational corporations; and 3) Political institutions, private
business development, and formalization.

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