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Funding Global Public Goods: The Dark Side of Multilateralism
Authors:Patrick Bayer  Johannes Urpelainen
Affiliation:1. Department of Political Science, University of Mannheim, , Mannheim, Germany;2. Department of Political Science, Columbia University, , New York, New York, USA
Abstract:
The funding of global public goods, such as climate mitigation, presents a complex strategic problem. Potential recipients demand side payments for implementing projects that furnish global public goods, and donors can cooperate to provide the funding. We offer a game‐theoretic analysis of this problem. In our model, a recipient demands project funding. Donors can form a multilateral program to jointly fund the project. If no program is formed, bilateral funding remains a possibility. We find that donors rely on multilateralism if their preferences are relatively symmetric and domestic political constraints on funding are lax. In this case, the recipient secures large rents from project implementation. Thus, even donors with strong interests in global public good provision have incentives to oppose institutional arrangements that promote multilateral funding. These incentives have played an important role in multilateral negotiations on climate finance, especially in Cancun (2010) and Durban (2011).
Keywords:global public goods  climate finance  international governance  multilateralism
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