Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 Studying Economic Voting
- 2 Party Choice as a Two-Stage Process
- 3 Hypotheses and Data: The Theoretical and Empirical Setting
- 4 Effects of the Economy on Party Support
- 5 The Economic Voter
- 6 From Individual Preferences to Election Outcomes
- 7 The Economy, Party Competition, and the Vote
- Epilogue: Where to Go from Here in the Study of Economic Voting?
- Appendix A The Surveys Employed in This Book
- Appendix B Detailed Results Not Reported in the Main Text
- References
- Index
3 - Hypotheses and Data: The Theoretical and Empirical Setting
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 Studying Economic Voting
- 2 Party Choice as a Two-Stage Process
- 3 Hypotheses and Data: The Theoretical and Empirical Setting
- 4 Effects of the Economy on Party Support
- 5 The Economic Voter
- 6 From Individual Preferences to Election Outcomes
- 7 The Economy, Party Competition, and the Vote
- Epilogue: Where to Go from Here in the Study of Economic Voting?
- Appendix A The Surveys Employed in This Book
- Appendix B Detailed Results Not Reported in the Main Text
- References
- Index
Summary
In this chapter, we will pull together the theoretical expectations we derive from the relevant literature (much of which has already been referred to in Chapter 1) and set them out in the form of testable hypotheses. These expectations mainly concern the effects of economic conditions on voting. They will be complemented, however, by expectations that are included to produce the control variables we need if our models are to be well specified. Having set out the relevant hypotheses, we will then describe the data with which we test those hypotheses, and the economic and political settings from which the data were obtained.
Hypotheses
Our theorizing can be divided into three categories. First is the fundamental expectation upon which all of the economic voting literature is based: that government standing with the voters will be hurt by bad economic times and (perhaps) helped by good economic times (e.g., Tufte 1978; Chrystal and Alt 1981; Hibbs 1977; Fair 1988; Lewis-Beck 1988; Markus 1988, 1992; Erikson 1989; Mackuen, Erikson, and Stimson 1992; Powell and Whitten 1993; Whitten and Palmer 1999; Nadeau and Lewis-Beck 2001), together with its generally unspoken corollary relating to opposition parties (that they should in some way suffer less or even benefit from bad economic conditions). Then we move on to the elaborations of this hypothesis that become possible in the context of models that distinguish between different government (and opposition) parties.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Economy and the VoteEconomic Conditions and Elections in Fifteen Countries, pp. 54 - 81Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007