We present a model of (re)elections in which an incumbency advantage arises because the incumbent can manipulate issue salience by choosing inefficient policies in the policy dimension in which he is the stronger candidate. The voters are uncertain about the state of the world and the incumbent's choice of policy. Under complete information they would reelect the incumbent if and only if the state is sufficiently high. Undesirable policy outcomes may be due to either a bad state or the incumbent's choice of inefficient policies. The incumbent uses inefficient policies in intermediate states, whereby he creates uncertainty about the true state in such a way that voters are better off in expectation reelecting him. Hence the equilibrium exhib...
This paper analyses the problem that an incumbent faces during the legislature when deciding how to ...
I present a model of repeated electoral competition between two parties. A part of the electorate vo...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
We present a model of (re)elections in which an incumbency advantage arises because the incumbent ca...
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and...
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and...
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and...
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and...
This paper models a purely informational mechanism behind the incumbency advantage. In a two-period ...
This paper models a purely informational mechanism behind the incumbency advantage. In a two-period ...
The existing formal studies on the incumbency advantage do not take strategicchoices of electoral ch...
We develop a model that calls into question whether some key sources of incumbency advantage frequen...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
Incumbency (dis)advantage when citizens can propose Abstract: This paper analyses the problem that a...
Abstract: Most campaigns do not revolve around policy commitments; instead, we think of campaigns as...
This paper analyses the problem that an incumbent faces during the legislature when deciding how to ...
I present a model of repeated electoral competition between two parties. A part of the electorate vo...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
We present a model of (re)elections in which an incumbency advantage arises because the incumbent ca...
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and...
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and...
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and...
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and...
This paper models a purely informational mechanism behind the incumbency advantage. In a two-period ...
This paper models a purely informational mechanism behind the incumbency advantage. In a two-period ...
The existing formal studies on the incumbency advantage do not take strategicchoices of electoral ch...
We develop a model that calls into question whether some key sources of incumbency advantage frequen...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
Incumbency (dis)advantage when citizens can propose Abstract: This paper analyses the problem that a...
Abstract: Most campaigns do not revolve around policy commitments; instead, we think of campaigns as...
This paper analyses the problem that an incumbent faces during the legislature when deciding how to ...
I present a model of repeated electoral competition between two parties. A part of the electorate vo...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...