Using data on elections to the United States House of Representatives (1946-1998), this paper exploits a quasi-experiment generated by the electoral system in order to determine if political incumbency provides an electoral advantage – an implicit first-order prediction of most principal-agent theories of politician and voter behavior. Candidates who just barely won an election (barely became the incumbent) are likely to be ex ante comparable in all other ways to candidates who barely lost, and so their differential electoral outcomes in the next election should represent a true incumbency advantage. The regression discontinuity analysis provides striking evidence that incumbency has a significant causal effect of raising the probability of...
This thesis provides original quantitative research on MPs’ incumbency advantage in Great Britain fr...
Have electoral reforms to reduce the incumbency advantage worked as intended? I articulate a theory ...
This paper presents a simple statistical exercise to provide a benchmark for the degree of electoral...
This paper estimates the incumbency effects in the legislative elections of 45 states in the US duri...
In recent years, research on the incumbency effect using a regression discontinuity design has flour...
When Does Regression Discontinuity Design Work? Evidence from Random Election Outcomes We use electi...
In developed democracies, incumbents are consistently found to have an electoral advantage over thei...
Theory: A simple rational entry argument suggests that the value of incumbency consists not just of...
In this paper we prove theoretically and demonstrate empirically that all existing measures of incum...
This study provides one of the first causal estimates of both the personal and partisan incumbency a...
We develop a model that calls into question whether some key sources of incumbency advantage frequen...
US House incumbents enjoy profound electoral advantages, yet existing research has not asked whether...
Following David Lee’s pioneering work, numerous scholars have applied the regression discontinuity (...
Ireland provides an interesting setting for the study of incumbency advantage. Its electoral system ...
In the last twenty years, scholars have scrutinized the electoral advantages conferred by incumbency...
This thesis provides original quantitative research on MPs’ incumbency advantage in Great Britain fr...
Have electoral reforms to reduce the incumbency advantage worked as intended? I articulate a theory ...
This paper presents a simple statistical exercise to provide a benchmark for the degree of electoral...
This paper estimates the incumbency effects in the legislative elections of 45 states in the US duri...
In recent years, research on the incumbency effect using a regression discontinuity design has flour...
When Does Regression Discontinuity Design Work? Evidence from Random Election Outcomes We use electi...
In developed democracies, incumbents are consistently found to have an electoral advantage over thei...
Theory: A simple rational entry argument suggests that the value of incumbency consists not just of...
In this paper we prove theoretically and demonstrate empirically that all existing measures of incum...
This study provides one of the first causal estimates of both the personal and partisan incumbency a...
We develop a model that calls into question whether some key sources of incumbency advantage frequen...
US House incumbents enjoy profound electoral advantages, yet existing research has not asked whether...
Following David Lee’s pioneering work, numerous scholars have applied the regression discontinuity (...
Ireland provides an interesting setting for the study of incumbency advantage. Its electoral system ...
In the last twenty years, scholars have scrutinized the electoral advantages conferred by incumbency...
This thesis provides original quantitative research on MPs’ incumbency advantage in Great Britain fr...
Have electoral reforms to reduce the incumbency advantage worked as intended? I articulate a theory ...
This paper presents a simple statistical exercise to provide a benchmark for the degree of electoral...