In a campaign spending contest framework, we investigate the potency of frequently cited sources of incumbency advantage in generating the observed patterns of campaign expenditure and reelection rates. Since one Dollar of extra spending should not change a certain loser to a certain winner, we extend the literature by allowing the electoral benefit of visibility to be stochastic. The model provides an explanation of earlier empirical findings that district variation in the cost of visibility does not influence incumbents’ victory probability. Furthermore, in contrast to previous literature, the model predicts that campaign finance legislation can increase challengers’ expected payoffs
We develop a model of electoral campaigns as dynamic contests in which two office-motivated candidat...
We study the comparative statics of the incumbency advantage in a model of electoral selection and s...
I present a model of repeated electoral competition between two parties. A part of the electorate vo...
In a campaign spending contest framework, we investigate the potency of frequently cited sources of ...
In a campaign spending contest model, this paper investigates whether the sources of incumbency adv...
Abstract: Most campaigns do not revolve around policy commitments; instead, we think of campaigns as...
In estimating incumbency advantage and campaign spending effect, simultaneity problem is composed of...
A puzzle in research on campaign spending is that while expenditure is positively related to votes w...
This paper presents a model which captures the three main arguments for and against campaign spendin...
We develop a model that calls into question whether some key sources of incumbency advantage frequen...
This paper takes a game-theoretic approach to the analysis of the spending-votes relationship in Con...
In this article, we use a regression discontinuity design to estimate the causal effect of incumbenc...
This paper estimates the effects of incumbent spending and challenger spending in U.S. House electio...
Objective This article seeks to explain the puzzle of why incumbents spend so much on campaigns desp...
The existing formal studies on the incumbency advantage do not take strategicchoices of electoral ch...
We develop a model of electoral campaigns as dynamic contests in which two office-motivated candidat...
We study the comparative statics of the incumbency advantage in a model of electoral selection and s...
I present a model of repeated electoral competition between two parties. A part of the electorate vo...
In a campaign spending contest framework, we investigate the potency of frequently cited sources of ...
In a campaign spending contest model, this paper investigates whether the sources of incumbency adv...
Abstract: Most campaigns do not revolve around policy commitments; instead, we think of campaigns as...
In estimating incumbency advantage and campaign spending effect, simultaneity problem is composed of...
A puzzle in research on campaign spending is that while expenditure is positively related to votes w...
This paper presents a model which captures the three main arguments for and against campaign spendin...
We develop a model that calls into question whether some key sources of incumbency advantage frequen...
This paper takes a game-theoretic approach to the analysis of the spending-votes relationship in Con...
In this article, we use a regression discontinuity design to estimate the causal effect of incumbenc...
This paper estimates the effects of incumbent spending and challenger spending in U.S. House electio...
Objective This article seeks to explain the puzzle of why incumbents spend so much on campaigns desp...
The existing formal studies on the incumbency advantage do not take strategicchoices of electoral ch...
We develop a model of electoral campaigns as dynamic contests in which two office-motivated candidat...
We study the comparative statics of the incumbency advantage in a model of electoral selection and s...
I present a model of repeated electoral competition between two parties. A part of the electorate vo...