This paper estimates the impact of a large anti-poverty cash transfer program, the Uruguayan PANES, on political support for the government that implemented it. Using the discontinuity in program assignment based on a pretreatment eligibility score, we find that beneficiary households are 11 to 13 percentage points more likely to favor the current government relative to the previous government. Political support effects persist after the program ends. Our results are consistent with theories of rational but poorly informed voters who use policy to infer politicians' redistributive preferences or competence, as well as with behavioral economics expectations grounded in reciprocity
Abstract of associated article: This paper provides evidence that vote buying in poor democracies is...
This paper estimates the electoral effects of conditional cash transfers (CCTs)-the fastest-growing ...
Conditional cash transfer programs (CCTs) allow poor households and individuals access to income sup...
This paper estimates the impact of a large anti-poverty cash transfer program, the Uruguayan PANES, ...
We estimate the impact of a large anti-poverty program – the Uruguayan PANES – on political support ...
Scholars concur that conditional cash transfer (CCT) programs have a strong pro- incumbent effect am...
How do national social programs influence local voting? This study utilizes the experimental set up ...
In this paper, we re-examine a recent finding that Progresa, Mexico’s conditional cash transfer (CCT...
Abstract This paper estimates the effect of enrollment in a large scale anti-poverty program in Colo...
Since the 1990s, many governments in middle and low-income countries have used conditional cash tran...
Studies of the electoral effects of cash transfer programs in Latin America have largely treated the...
Conditional Cash Transfers (CCTs) have spread through the developing world in the past two decades. ...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
In the late 1990s and 2000s, a new kind of social policy spread through Latin American countries. Ne...
Why have decades of high and rising inequality in the United States not increased public support for...
Abstract of associated article: This paper provides evidence that vote buying in poor democracies is...
This paper estimates the electoral effects of conditional cash transfers (CCTs)-the fastest-growing ...
Conditional cash transfer programs (CCTs) allow poor households and individuals access to income sup...
This paper estimates the impact of a large anti-poverty cash transfer program, the Uruguayan PANES, ...
We estimate the impact of a large anti-poverty program – the Uruguayan PANES – on political support ...
Scholars concur that conditional cash transfer (CCT) programs have a strong pro- incumbent effect am...
How do national social programs influence local voting? This study utilizes the experimental set up ...
In this paper, we re-examine a recent finding that Progresa, Mexico’s conditional cash transfer (CCT...
Abstract This paper estimates the effect of enrollment in a large scale anti-poverty program in Colo...
Since the 1990s, many governments in middle and low-income countries have used conditional cash tran...
Studies of the electoral effects of cash transfer programs in Latin America have largely treated the...
Conditional Cash Transfers (CCTs) have spread through the developing world in the past two decades. ...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
In the late 1990s and 2000s, a new kind of social policy spread through Latin American countries. Ne...
Why have decades of high and rising inequality in the United States not increased public support for...
Abstract of associated article: This paper provides evidence that vote buying in poor democracies is...
This paper estimates the electoral effects of conditional cash transfers (CCTs)-the fastest-growing ...
Conditional cash transfer programs (CCTs) allow poor households and individuals access to income sup...