This paper studies a model of how political parties use resources for campaigning to inform voters. We show existence of equilibrium under mild assumptions for an arbitrary number of parties. The main result is that if the parties are more extreme, then they spend less resources on campaigning (on average), compared with moderate parties. The reason is the following. Consider voters that are informed by one party only, say party 1. If both parties move closer to each other, then the actual and expected platform moves closer to the indifferent voters peak. By concavity of preferences, the increase in payoff of voting for the party that informed is bigger than the increase in payoff of voting for the other party. Thus, the previously indiffe...
Political parties face a crucial trade-off between electoral and partisan goals: should they put ele...
Party competition is largely about making policy promises to voters. We argue that the clarity of th...
How does political polarization affect the welfare of the electorate? We analyze this question using...
This paper studies a model of how political parties use resources for campaigning to inform voters. ...
This paper studies a model of how political parties use resources for campaigning to inform voters. ...
This paper develops a political competition model in which campaign platforms are partially binding....
The paper investigates strategic, informative campaigning by two parties when politics concern redis...
We analyze a unidimensional model of two-candidate electoral competition where voters have im- perfe...
In most elections, voters care about several issues, but candidates may have to choose only a few to...
This dissertation examines the tie between campaign spending and voter calculus where candidates’ pl...
ABSTRACT. We model electoral competition between two parties in a winner-take-all election. Parties ...
This paper develops a model in which platforms are partially binding: a candidate who implements a p...
Party competition is largely about making policy promises to voters. We argue that the clarity of th...
This paper develops a probabilistic voting model in which a single lobby group commits campaign cont...
This article investigates the ways in which parties stake out left–right positions that deviate from...
Political parties face a crucial trade-off between electoral and partisan goals: should they put ele...
Party competition is largely about making policy promises to voters. We argue that the clarity of th...
How does political polarization affect the welfare of the electorate? We analyze this question using...
This paper studies a model of how political parties use resources for campaigning to inform voters. ...
This paper studies a model of how political parties use resources for campaigning to inform voters. ...
This paper develops a political competition model in which campaign platforms are partially binding....
The paper investigates strategic, informative campaigning by two parties when politics concern redis...
We analyze a unidimensional model of two-candidate electoral competition where voters have im- perfe...
In most elections, voters care about several issues, but candidates may have to choose only a few to...
This dissertation examines the tie between campaign spending and voter calculus where candidates’ pl...
ABSTRACT. We model electoral competition between two parties in a winner-take-all election. Parties ...
This paper develops a model in which platforms are partially binding: a candidate who implements a p...
Party competition is largely about making policy promises to voters. We argue that the clarity of th...
This paper develops a probabilistic voting model in which a single lobby group commits campaign cont...
This article investigates the ways in which parties stake out left–right positions that deviate from...
Political parties face a crucial trade-off between electoral and partisan goals: should they put ele...
Party competition is largely about making policy promises to voters. We argue that the clarity of th...
How does political polarization affect the welfare of the electorate? We analyze this question using...