Prominent studies of electoral accountability and economic voting suggest that government constraints and international financial structures decrease the economic vote. The proposed mechanism is often labelled as the Room to Maneuver and it posits that because elected officials have limited space to propose and implement economic policy, (1) politicians can shirk responsibility, and thus (2) voters are less likely to place voting weights on the economy. However, results from elections that took place in Europe during the Great Recession and scholarly research on economic voting in these elections cast serious doubts on the causal mechanism. This paper directly tests this mechanism with a survey experiment using data from Greece (the country...
The economic voting literature shows that good economic performance bolsters the electoral prospects...
© European Consortium for Political Research 2018. Considerable research shows the presence of an ec...
The economic voting literature has been dominated by the incumbency-oriented hypothesis, in which vo...
Prominent studies of electoral accountability and economic voting suggest that government constraint...
Incumbent parties in Southern Europe experienced losses in their electoral support that came along w...
An abundance of comparative survey research has established the presence of economic voting as a ind...
In economic voting models, the electorate punishes governments associated with bad economic results ...
There is a puzzle which emerged following the Eurozone crisis: whereas the salience of the economy s...
An abundance of comparative survey research argues the presence of economic voting as an individual ...
Working within a selection model of economic voting we propose explanations for the cross-national a...
Having joined the Eurozone in 2001, Greece experienced a short period of economic euphoria before co...
The Great Recession undoubtedly reduced the electoral prospects of incumbent parties, coherently wit...
The paper explores a question raised by the 2011 Irish election, which saw an almost unprecedented d...
We exploit the act of the conservative Greek government (2004-2009) to fiddle the books as a natural...
Using the 2009 and 2014 European Election Studies (EES), we explore the effect of the economy on the...
The economic voting literature shows that good economic performance bolsters the electoral prospects...
© European Consortium for Political Research 2018. Considerable research shows the presence of an ec...
The economic voting literature has been dominated by the incumbency-oriented hypothesis, in which vo...
Prominent studies of electoral accountability and economic voting suggest that government constraint...
Incumbent parties in Southern Europe experienced losses in their electoral support that came along w...
An abundance of comparative survey research has established the presence of economic voting as a ind...
In economic voting models, the electorate punishes governments associated with bad economic results ...
There is a puzzle which emerged following the Eurozone crisis: whereas the salience of the economy s...
An abundance of comparative survey research argues the presence of economic voting as an individual ...
Working within a selection model of economic voting we propose explanations for the cross-national a...
Having joined the Eurozone in 2001, Greece experienced a short period of economic euphoria before co...
The Great Recession undoubtedly reduced the electoral prospects of incumbent parties, coherently wit...
The paper explores a question raised by the 2011 Irish election, which saw an almost unprecedented d...
We exploit the act of the conservative Greek government (2004-2009) to fiddle the books as a natural...
Using the 2009 and 2014 European Election Studies (EES), we explore the effect of the economy on the...
The economic voting literature shows that good economic performance bolsters the electoral prospects...
© European Consortium for Political Research 2018. Considerable research shows the presence of an ec...
The economic voting literature has been dominated by the incumbency-oriented hypothesis, in which vo...