We analyze conditions under which campaign rhetoric may affect the beliefs of the voters over what policy will be implemented by the winning candidate of an election. We develop a model of repeated elections with complete information in which candidates are purely ideological. We analyze an equilibrium in which voters’ strategies involve a credible threat to punish candidates who renege of their campaign promises, and all campaign promises are believed by voters, and honored by candidates. We characterize the maximal credible campaign promises and obtain that the degree to which promises are credible in equilibrium is an increasing function of the value of a candidate’s reputation.Repeated Elections, Commitment, Reputation
I develop a formal model of political campaigns in which candidates choose how to distribute their r...
This paper proposes a simple mechanism for evaluating the relevance of credibility problems in polit...
This paper models the strategic encounter of two office-motivated candidates who may or may not anno...
We analyze conditions under which candidates’ reputations may affect the beliefs of the voters over ...
We analyze conditions under which campaign rhetoric may affect the beliefs of the vot-ers over what ...
We analyze conditions under which a candidate's campaign rhetoric may affect the beliefs of the vote...
We analyze conditions under which candidates ’ reputations may affect voters ’ beliefs over what pol...
This paper builds a dynamic model of electoral competition with nonbinding campaign promises. We fin...
A common assumption in Political Science literature is policy commitment: candidates maintain their ...
This dissertation consists of five independent essays: Reliability and Responsibility: A Theory of ...
Are politicians who follow a strategy of reputational development rewarded with high levels of corpo...
Political campaigns are usually seen either as a way of passing information about candidates' intend...
The main focus of this thesis is the analysis of political campaigns when candidates choose their st...
I study elections between citizen-candidates who cannot make binding policy commitments before takin...
88 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.Political competition and cand...
I develop a formal model of political campaigns in which candidates choose how to distribute their r...
This paper proposes a simple mechanism for evaluating the relevance of credibility problems in polit...
This paper models the strategic encounter of two office-motivated candidates who may or may not anno...
We analyze conditions under which candidates’ reputations may affect the beliefs of the voters over ...
We analyze conditions under which campaign rhetoric may affect the beliefs of the vot-ers over what ...
We analyze conditions under which a candidate's campaign rhetoric may affect the beliefs of the vote...
We analyze conditions under which candidates ’ reputations may affect voters ’ beliefs over what pol...
This paper builds a dynamic model of electoral competition with nonbinding campaign promises. We fin...
A common assumption in Political Science literature is policy commitment: candidates maintain their ...
This dissertation consists of five independent essays: Reliability and Responsibility: A Theory of ...
Are politicians who follow a strategy of reputational development rewarded with high levels of corpo...
Political campaigns are usually seen either as a way of passing information about candidates' intend...
The main focus of this thesis is the analysis of political campaigns when candidates choose their st...
I study elections between citizen-candidates who cannot make binding policy commitments before takin...
88 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.Political competition and cand...
I develop a formal model of political campaigns in which candidates choose how to distribute their r...
This paper proposes a simple mechanism for evaluating the relevance of credibility problems in polit...
This paper models the strategic encounter of two office-motivated candidates who may or may not anno...