A strand of the political economy literature emphasizes the effect of income inequality on growth and poverty, which materialises through redistribution. The theoretical expectation postulated by standard economic theory is that high inequality would lead to higher redistribution via the collective action of the median voter. The empirical literature testing the median voter theorem has been conducted in the context of industrialised economies. In this article, we examine the median voter hypothesis with specific reference to SSA, a region characterised by high levels of income inequality and limited redistribution. We adopt an instrumental variable approach to unpack the determinants and plausible mechanisms underpinning this relationship....
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequalitymatter...
One proposition of the popular median-voter hypothesis is a positive relationship between demand for...
Why are governments elected by proportional representation more prone to redistribute income than th...
A strand of the political economy literature emphasizes the effect of income inequality on growth an...
The median voter hypothesis is important to endogenous growth theories because it provides the polit...
The relationship between income inequality and the level of redistribution seems to be clear only a...
The median voter hypothesis has been central to an extensive literature on consequences of income di...
In this paper, we abandon the stylized median voter and study (i) how distributional tensions can ac...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
This article explores how preferences for redistribution among voters are affected by the structure ...
This article explores how preferences for redistribution among voters are affected by th...
This paper first points out the lack of consensus between empirical and theoretical studies of incom...
This paper revisits the relationship between inequality and redistribution in a panel of advanced OE...
Reducing income inequality is a crucial goal of sustainable development as income inequality often v...
This paper improves the empirical investigation on the effectiveness of the median voter theorem. Us...
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequalitymatter...
One proposition of the popular median-voter hypothesis is a positive relationship between demand for...
Why are governments elected by proportional representation more prone to redistribute income than th...
A strand of the political economy literature emphasizes the effect of income inequality on growth an...
The median voter hypothesis is important to endogenous growth theories because it provides the polit...
The relationship between income inequality and the level of redistribution seems to be clear only a...
The median voter hypothesis has been central to an extensive literature on consequences of income di...
In this paper, we abandon the stylized median voter and study (i) how distributional tensions can ac...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
This article explores how preferences for redistribution among voters are affected by the structure ...
This article explores how preferences for redistribution among voters are affected by th...
This paper first points out the lack of consensus between empirical and theoretical studies of incom...
This paper revisits the relationship between inequality and redistribution in a panel of advanced OE...
Reducing income inequality is a crucial goal of sustainable development as income inequality often v...
This paper improves the empirical investigation on the effectiveness of the median voter theorem. Us...
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequalitymatter...
One proposition of the popular median-voter hypothesis is a positive relationship between demand for...
Why are governments elected by proportional representation more prone to redistribute income than th...