This paper illustrates one strategy for testing a theory of economic influences on voting. We use a competitive equilibrium model of the economy to determine the impact of an individual’s economic position on his or her economic interests and, ultimately, political interests. We then test whether this impact is observed in voting behavior, addressing the resulting specification and estimation problems in the context of U.S. presidential election data. Our empirical results suggest that, despite these formidable problems, we can usefully connect political–economic models and discrete-choice (probit) models of voting
In this paper, we are testing the responsive hypothesis: if the economy is growing strongly and unem...
of the canonical causal claims in political science links individuals ’ evaluations of the national ...
Cross-sectional data are used to assess the effect of state-level economic conditions on state outco...
Voting is likely the tool most strongly associated with the idea of democratic decisions, be it at n...
The connection between the economy and vote choice continues to garner interest both in the academic...
Economic voting is a phenomenon that political scientists and economists can hardly overlook. There ...
To paint a fuller picture of economic voters, we combine personal income records with a representati...
Nowadays, the politicians’ behavior is a matter of interest not only for political scientists but al...
We develop an incomplete-information theory of economic voting, where voters ’ infor-mation about ma...
We review a large formal literature on economic models of voting and electoral politics. We discuss ...
Forthcoming, Electoral Studies Reevaluating the Sociotropic Economic Voting Hypothesis One of the ca...
Vita.The electoral process is an integral part of democratic decision-making. It is traditionally vi...
We review a large formal literature on economic models of voting and electoral politics. We discuss ...
Almost all the prolific work done on economic voting has been based on the classic reward–punishment...
PhDPolitical scienceUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/157367/1/7...
In this paper, we are testing the responsive hypothesis: if the economy is growing strongly and unem...
of the canonical causal claims in political science links individuals ’ evaluations of the national ...
Cross-sectional data are used to assess the effect of state-level economic conditions on state outco...
Voting is likely the tool most strongly associated with the idea of democratic decisions, be it at n...
The connection between the economy and vote choice continues to garner interest both in the academic...
Economic voting is a phenomenon that political scientists and economists can hardly overlook. There ...
To paint a fuller picture of economic voters, we combine personal income records with a representati...
Nowadays, the politicians’ behavior is a matter of interest not only for political scientists but al...
We develop an incomplete-information theory of economic voting, where voters ’ infor-mation about ma...
We review a large formal literature on economic models of voting and electoral politics. We discuss ...
Forthcoming, Electoral Studies Reevaluating the Sociotropic Economic Voting Hypothesis One of the ca...
Vita.The electoral process is an integral part of democratic decision-making. It is traditionally vi...
We review a large formal literature on economic models of voting and electoral politics. We discuss ...
Almost all the prolific work done on economic voting has been based on the classic reward–punishment...
PhDPolitical scienceUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/157367/1/7...
In this paper, we are testing the responsive hypothesis: if the economy is growing strongly and unem...
of the canonical causal claims in political science links individuals ’ evaluations of the national ...
Cross-sectional data are used to assess the effect of state-level economic conditions on state outco...