We study the short-run effect of elections on monetary aggregates in a sample of 85 low and middle income democracies (1975-2009). We find an increase in the growth rate of M1 during election months of about one tenth of a standard deviation. A similar effect can neither be detected in established OECD democracies nor in other months. The effect is larger in democracies with many poor and uneducated voters, and in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and in East-Asia and the Pacific. We argue that the election month monetary expansion is related to systemic vote buying which requires significant amounts of cash to be disbursed right before elections. The finely timed increase in M1 is consistent with this; is inconsistent with a monetary cycl...
This paper investigates the impact of elections on the level and composition of fiscal instruments u...
This paper provides evidences of the electoral influence on fiscal policy in the Eurozone countries....
This chapter studies the presence of political cycles in Turkey’s recent economic history. It first ...
We provide new evidence on the short-run effect of elections on monetary aggregates. We study month...
We report robust evidence of a new short-run monetary election cycle: the monthly growth rate of th...
The purpose of this paper is to test for evidence of opportunistic "political business cycles" in a ...
Political budget cycles (PBCs) have been well documented in the literature, albeit not for all circu...
Casual observation of fiscal aggregates in developed economies detects current expenditure rising fa...
The literature on political business cycles (PBC) suggests that due to the myopic nature of individ...
Over the last decades, there has been plenty of research and articles on Political Business Cycles (...
The literature on political business cycles (PBC) suggests that incumbent governments manipulate th...
We present a model of the Political Budget Cycle in which voters and politicians have preferences fo...
Empirical research of political business cycles (PBCs) may suffer from endogeneity bias when incumbe...
In this paper we build a framework where the interplay between the lobby power of special interest g...
This chapter reviews the literature on political budget cycles (PBCs), focusing on studies that anal...
This paper investigates the impact of elections on the level and composition of fiscal instruments u...
This paper provides evidences of the electoral influence on fiscal policy in the Eurozone countries....
This chapter studies the presence of political cycles in Turkey’s recent economic history. It first ...
We provide new evidence on the short-run effect of elections on monetary aggregates. We study month...
We report robust evidence of a new short-run monetary election cycle: the monthly growth rate of th...
The purpose of this paper is to test for evidence of opportunistic "political business cycles" in a ...
Political budget cycles (PBCs) have been well documented in the literature, albeit not for all circu...
Casual observation of fiscal aggregates in developed economies detects current expenditure rising fa...
The literature on political business cycles (PBC) suggests that due to the myopic nature of individ...
Over the last decades, there has been plenty of research and articles on Political Business Cycles (...
The literature on political business cycles (PBC) suggests that incumbent governments manipulate th...
We present a model of the Political Budget Cycle in which voters and politicians have preferences fo...
Empirical research of political business cycles (PBCs) may suffer from endogeneity bias when incumbe...
In this paper we build a framework where the interplay between the lobby power of special interest g...
This chapter reviews the literature on political budget cycles (PBCs), focusing on studies that anal...
This paper investigates the impact of elections on the level and composition of fiscal instruments u...
This paper provides evidences of the electoral influence on fiscal policy in the Eurozone countries....
This chapter studies the presence of political cycles in Turkey’s recent economic history. It first ...