departs from standard neoclassical approaches, notably those of Niskanen (1971) and
Peltzman (1976), in several important respects. First our approach explicitly models a
system of three-way interaction among bureaus, politicians, and interest groups. Second, it
allows for institutional features of each type of participant. Third, it is a model of dynamic
process. Fourth, participants make choices adoptively rather than optimizing. Fifth …