ABSTRACT This study examines the political determinants of intergovernmental fiscal transfers in South Korea, focusing on partisan alignment, electoral competitiveness, national executive partisanship, and election timing. Using fixed‐effects panel data from 17 regions (2013–2023), the analysis evaluates competing expectations from distributive politics and political budget cycle theories. The results provide little support for alignment‐based favoritism or swing targeting: neither partisan congruence nor electoral competitiveness consistently predicts higher transfers. Instead, electoral timing—particularly the dynamics surrounding presidential elections—emerges as the dominant factor. Local elections exhibit anticipatory increases in the preceding year. In contrast, presidential elections generate a distinctive pattern: transfers contract 1 year prior and surge sharply during the election year, a timing consistent with the political and administrative pressures surrounding presidential transitions. These findings highlight the central role of executive‐driven temporal incentives in shaping national–subnational fiscal relations and call for a more temporally grounded understanding of distributive politics. Related Articles Lee, Moonsoo. 2025. “Rich Mayors, Poor Social Services? The Impact of Mayoral Wealth on Social Spending in Korean Local Governments.” Politics & Policy 53, no. 5: e70068. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.70068 . Heo, Inhye. 2013. “The Political Economy of Policy Gridlock in South Korea: The Case of the Lee Myung‐bak Government's Green Growth Policy.” Politics & Policy 41, no. 4: 509–535. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12029 . Hong, Sounman, Suho Ji, and Taek Kyu Kim. 2024. “Political Determinants of Government Transparency: Evidence from Open Government Data Initiatives.” Politics & Policy 52, no. 3): 633–654. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12607 .
Moonsoo Lee (Wed,) studied this question.