How do parties decide which issues to emphasize during electoral competition? We argue that the answer to this question depends on how parties of the Left and of the Right respond to economic inequality. Increasing inequality shifts the proportion of the population falling into lower socioeconomic categories, thereby increasing the size of the electoral constituency that is receptive toward leftist parties' redistributive economic appeals. In the face of rising inequality, then, leftist parties will emphasize economic issues in their manifestos. By contrast, the non-redistributive economic policies often espoused by rightist parties will not appeal to this burgeoning constituency. Rather, we argue, rightist parties will opt to emphasize val...
We combine two dominant approaches to studying how issues influence elections: one that emphasizes ...
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequality matte...
While a voluminous literature has shed light on the relationship between economic conditions and gov...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
Political parties competing in elections for the power to set public policy face the problem of maki...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
Motivated by recent work suggesting that low-income citizens are virtually ignored in the American p...
While income inequality is an important normative issue for students of democratic politics, little ...
Economic voting is multidimensional (covering valence, patrimony and positional dimensions), and a g...
Political parties respond strategically to the electoral success of radical right populist parties (...
Why is it that some countries have witnessed significant increases in inequality since the 1960s whi...
Although income inequality is an important normative issue for students of democratic politics, litt...
Abstract: Why is it that some countries have witnessed significant increases in inequality since the...
Abstract: Why is it that some countries have witnessed significant increases in inequality since the...
Do electorates hold governments accountable for the distribution of economic welfare? Building on th...
We combine two dominant approaches to studying how issues influence elections: one that emphasizes ...
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequality matte...
While a voluminous literature has shed light on the relationship between economic conditions and gov...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
Political parties competing in elections for the power to set public policy face the problem of maki...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
Motivated by recent work suggesting that low-income citizens are virtually ignored in the American p...
While income inequality is an important normative issue for students of democratic politics, little ...
Economic voting is multidimensional (covering valence, patrimony and positional dimensions), and a g...
Political parties respond strategically to the electoral success of radical right populist parties (...
Why is it that some countries have witnessed significant increases in inequality since the 1960s whi...
Although income inequality is an important normative issue for students of democratic politics, litt...
Abstract: Why is it that some countries have witnessed significant increases in inequality since the...
Abstract: Why is it that some countries have witnessed significant increases in inequality since the...
Do electorates hold governments accountable for the distribution of economic welfare? Building on th...
We combine two dominant approaches to studying how issues influence elections: one that emphasizes ...
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequality matte...
While a voluminous literature has shed light on the relationship between economic conditions and gov...