Clientelism is frequently observed in our societies. Various mechanisms that help sustain incomplete political contracts (e.g., monitoring and punishment) have been studied in the literature to date. However, do such contracts emerge in elections with secret ballots when the interactions are one-shot? How does repetition affect the evolution of incomplete political contracts? Using an incentivized experiment, this paper finds that even during one-shot interactions where monitoring is not possible, candidates form incomplete contracts through vote buying and promise-making. The candidates’ clientelistic behaviors are heterogeneous: some target swing voters, whereas others offer the most to loyal voters, or even opposition voters. These tacti...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
In this paper, we present a critical survey of experiments on political clientelism and vote-buying....
Although canonical models of clientelism argue that brokers use dense social networks to monitor and...
Clientelism is frequently observed in our societies. Various mechanisms that help sustain incomplete...
Clientelism is frequently observed in our societies. Various mechanisms that help sustain incomplete...
Political clientelism is a dyadic relation in which a politician (the patron) gives material goods a...
Political clientelism is a dyadic relation in which a politician (the patron) gives material goods a...
Why does electoral clientelism persist when ballots are secret and elections are competitive? The pr...
Contemporary political parties often use state resources to win elections. In this context, electora...
In many countries, clientelist parties (or political machines) distribute selective benefits, especi...
This paper explores the contestious dynamics of politics that occurred in the Singular Election. We ...
In this paper, we present a critical survey of experiments on political clientelism and vote-buying....
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
In this paper we introduce vote-share contracts. Such contracts contain a vote-share threshold that ...
In this paper, we experimentally approach the question of which aspects of a voting procedure are ab...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
In this paper, we present a critical survey of experiments on political clientelism and vote-buying....
Although canonical models of clientelism argue that brokers use dense social networks to monitor and...
Clientelism is frequently observed in our societies. Various mechanisms that help sustain incomplete...
Clientelism is frequently observed in our societies. Various mechanisms that help sustain incomplete...
Political clientelism is a dyadic relation in which a politician (the patron) gives material goods a...
Political clientelism is a dyadic relation in which a politician (the patron) gives material goods a...
Why does electoral clientelism persist when ballots are secret and elections are competitive? The pr...
Contemporary political parties often use state resources to win elections. In this context, electora...
In many countries, clientelist parties (or political machines) distribute selective benefits, especi...
This paper explores the contestious dynamics of politics that occurred in the Singular Election. We ...
In this paper, we present a critical survey of experiments on political clientelism and vote-buying....
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
In this paper we introduce vote-share contracts. Such contracts contain a vote-share threshold that ...
In this paper, we experimentally approach the question of which aspects of a voting procedure are ab...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
In this paper, we present a critical survey of experiments on political clientelism and vote-buying....
Although canonical models of clientelism argue that brokers use dense social networks to monitor and...