This paper investigates the role of campaign advertising and the opportunity of legal restrictions on it. An electoral race is modeled as a signalling game with three classes of players: a continuum of voters, two candidates, and one interest group. The group has non-verifiable insider information on the candidates' valence and, on the basis of this information, offers a contribution to each candidate in exchange for a favorable policy position. Candidates spend the contributions they receive on non-directly informative advertising. This paper shows that: (1) A separating equilibrium exists in which the group contributes to a candidate only if the insider information about that candidate is positive; (2) Although voters are fully rational, ...
We study the interdependence between campaign contributions, the candidates’ positions, and electora...
This thesis contains two research areas including political advertising in presidential elections an...
This dissertation consists of three chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the literature on campaign effects, ...
This paper investigates the role of campaign advertising and the opportunity of legal restrictions o...
This paper investigates the role of campaign advertising and the opportunity of legal restrictions o...
In an electoral race, interest groups will be willing to \u85nance political candidates campaigns in...
This paper presents a model of political campaign contributions in which interest groups can engage ...
We provide a game-theoretical model of manipulative election campaigns with two political candidates...
This paper analyzes an electoral game where candidates have private information on their own types. ...
We present results from laboratory experimental elections in which voter informa-tion is endogenousl...
Spending on political advertising increases with every election cycle, not only for congressional or...
We study a Downsian model of elections in which two candidates who are primarily office-motivated ha...
In an electoral market, if voters cannot distinguish between good-quality and bad-quality candidates...
This paper shows how uninformed but rational voters can respond intelligently to political advertisi...
Can campaign communications credibly transmit information about candidates ’ pol-icy intentions? To ...
We study the interdependence between campaign contributions, the candidates’ positions, and electora...
This thesis contains two research areas including political advertising in presidential elections an...
This dissertation consists of three chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the literature on campaign effects, ...
This paper investigates the role of campaign advertising and the opportunity of legal restrictions o...
This paper investigates the role of campaign advertising and the opportunity of legal restrictions o...
In an electoral race, interest groups will be willing to \u85nance political candidates campaigns in...
This paper presents a model of political campaign contributions in which interest groups can engage ...
We provide a game-theoretical model of manipulative election campaigns with two political candidates...
This paper analyzes an electoral game where candidates have private information on their own types. ...
We present results from laboratory experimental elections in which voter informa-tion is endogenousl...
Spending on political advertising increases with every election cycle, not only for congressional or...
We study a Downsian model of elections in which two candidates who are primarily office-motivated ha...
In an electoral market, if voters cannot distinguish between good-quality and bad-quality candidates...
This paper shows how uninformed but rational voters can respond intelligently to political advertisi...
Can campaign communications credibly transmit information about candidates ’ pol-icy intentions? To ...
We study the interdependence between campaign contributions, the candidates’ positions, and electora...
This thesis contains two research areas including political advertising in presidential elections an...
This dissertation consists of three chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the literature on campaign effects, ...