Empirical models of retrospective voting primarily employ standard monetary and financial indicators to proxy for voters' utility and to explain voters' behavior. We show that subjective well-being explains variation in voting intention that goes beyond what is captured by these monetary and financial indicators. For example, individuals who are satisfied with their life are 1.6% more likely to support the incumbent; by contrast, a 10% increase in family income leads to a 0.18% increase in an individual's support of the incumbent. We use difference-in-differences analysis to identify how voter intention is affected by a negative shock to well-being: the death of a spouse. Individuals who experience the death of a spouse are around 10% less ...
Although the theory of retrospective voting receives wide support in the literature on voting behav...
Measuring individual welfare using data on reported subjective well-being has made great progress. I...
It is well-known that a voter's retrospective economic evaluations influence vote choice. A classic ...
Empirical models of retrospective voting primarily employ standard monetary and financial indicators...
Is it in politicians’ interest to focus policy on subjective well-being (SWB)? Many governments and ...
In this paper we extend the research on happiness and spatial theory of voting by exploring whether ...
There is a growing interest among policymakers in the use of subjective well-being (or ``happiness''...
Thesis: S.M. in Management Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Manageme...
What causes us to vote and what do we get out of it? We approach these questions using data on votin...
Liberini Proto RedoanoResearch by Federica Liberini, Eugenio Proto and Michela Redoano finds that Su...
Exploiting novel longitudinal data on individuals in Great Britain matched to their parliamentary co...
We examine the effects of the 2016 and 2012 US presidential election outcomes on subjective wellbein...
A rapidly growing literature has attempted to explain Donald Trump's success in the 2016 U.S. presid...
There is an emerging literature to explain the variation in voting behavior by subjective well-being...
Political scientists have studied extensively the gap between winners and losers of democratic elect...
Although the theory of retrospective voting receives wide support in the literature on voting behav...
Measuring individual welfare using data on reported subjective well-being has made great progress. I...
It is well-known that a voter's retrospective economic evaluations influence vote choice. A classic ...
Empirical models of retrospective voting primarily employ standard monetary and financial indicators...
Is it in politicians’ interest to focus policy on subjective well-being (SWB)? Many governments and ...
In this paper we extend the research on happiness and spatial theory of voting by exploring whether ...
There is a growing interest among policymakers in the use of subjective well-being (or ``happiness''...
Thesis: S.M. in Management Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Manageme...
What causes us to vote and what do we get out of it? We approach these questions using data on votin...
Liberini Proto RedoanoResearch by Federica Liberini, Eugenio Proto and Michela Redoano finds that Su...
Exploiting novel longitudinal data on individuals in Great Britain matched to their parliamentary co...
We examine the effects of the 2016 and 2012 US presidential election outcomes on subjective wellbein...
A rapidly growing literature has attempted to explain Donald Trump's success in the 2016 U.S. presid...
There is an emerging literature to explain the variation in voting behavior by subjective well-being...
Political scientists have studied extensively the gap between winners and losers of democratic elect...
Although the theory of retrospective voting receives wide support in the literature on voting behav...
Measuring individual welfare using data on reported subjective well-being has made great progress. I...
It is well-known that a voter's retrospective economic evaluations influence vote choice. A classic ...