We consider a model of electoral competition in which two politicians compete to get elected. Each politician is characterized by a valence, which is unobservable to voters and can take one of two values: high or low. The electorate prefers politicians with high valence, but random shocks may lead to the victory of low-valence ones. Candidates make statements concerning their valence. We show that if voters are standard expected utility maximizers, politicians statements lack any credibility and no information transmission takes place. By introducing reference-dependent preferences and loss aversion a là Koszegi and Rabin, we show that full revelation is possible. Indeed, if the electorate believes to candidates announcements, such announc...
We study a model in which politicians differ in their ability to im- plement some policy. In an elec...
We consider a model of two-candidate elections with a one-dimensional policy space. Spending on camp...
Abstract. We consider a model of two-candidate elections with a one-dimensional policy space. Spendi...
Two politicians compete to get elected. Each politician is characterized by a valence, which is unob...
We study a model of electoral competition where politicians are better informed than the electorate ...
I study elections between citizen-candidates who cannot make binding policy commitments before takin...
Why do office-motivated politicians sometimes espouse views that are non-congruent with their electo...
We analyze conditions under which candidates’ reputations may affect voters’ beliefs over what polic...
We study elections between two candidates who hold some private information valuable for the whole e...
We analyze a, model of two candidate competition in which candidate and voter preferences are privat...
We study a Downsian model of elections in which two candidates who are primarily office-motivated ha...
I analyze a model of electoral competition in which a candidate's reputation and his need of credibi...
We develop a dynamic repeated election model in which citizen candidates are distinguished by both t...
Many empirical investigations indicate that information is scarce and therefore costly to holders an...
This paper develops a political competition model in which campaign platforms are partially binding....
We study a model in which politicians differ in their ability to im- plement some policy. In an elec...
We consider a model of two-candidate elections with a one-dimensional policy space. Spending on camp...
Abstract. We consider a model of two-candidate elections with a one-dimensional policy space. Spendi...
Two politicians compete to get elected. Each politician is characterized by a valence, which is unob...
We study a model of electoral competition where politicians are better informed than the electorate ...
I study elections between citizen-candidates who cannot make binding policy commitments before takin...
Why do office-motivated politicians sometimes espouse views that are non-congruent with their electo...
We analyze conditions under which candidates’ reputations may affect voters’ beliefs over what polic...
We study elections between two candidates who hold some private information valuable for the whole e...
We analyze a, model of two candidate competition in which candidate and voter preferences are privat...
We study a Downsian model of elections in which two candidates who are primarily office-motivated ha...
I analyze a model of electoral competition in which a candidate's reputation and his need of credibi...
We develop a dynamic repeated election model in which citizen candidates are distinguished by both t...
Many empirical investigations indicate that information is scarce and therefore costly to holders an...
This paper develops a political competition model in which campaign platforms are partially binding....
We study a model in which politicians differ in their ability to im- plement some policy. In an elec...
We consider a model of two-candidate elections with a one-dimensional policy space. Spending on camp...
Abstract. We consider a model of two-candidate elections with a one-dimensional policy space. Spendi...