Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T11:02:55.810Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Incumbent Tenure Crowds Out Economic Voting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 October 2019

Martin Vinæs Larsen*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, Aarhus University, Denmark
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Does the importance of the economy change during a government's time in office? Governments arguably become more responsible for current economic conditions as their tenure progresses. This might lead voters to hold experienced governments more accountable for economic conditions. However, voters also accumulate information about governments' competence over time. If voters are Bayesian learners, then this growing stock of information should crowd out the importance of current economic conditions. This article explores these divergent predictions about the relationship between tenure and the economic vote using three datasets. First, using country-level data from a diverse set of elections, the study finds that support for more experienced governments is less dependent on economic growth. Secondly, using individual-level data from sixty election surveys covering ten countries, the article shows that voters' perceptions of the economy have a greater impact on government support when the government is inexperienced. Finally, the article examines a municipal reform in Denmark that assigned some voters to new local incumbents and finds that these voters responded more strongly to the local economy. In conclusion, all three studies point in the same direction: economic voting decreases with time in office.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abramowitz, AI (1988) An improved model for predicting presidential election outcomes. PS: Political Science & Politics 21(4), 843847.Google Scholar
Achen, CH and Bartels, LM (2017) Democracy for Realists: Why Elections Do Not Produce Responsive Government, vol. 4. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Alesina, A and Rosenthal, H (1995) Partisan Politics, Divided Government, and the Economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bartels, LM (2002) Beyond the running tally: partisan bias in political perceptions. Political Behavior 24(2), 117150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beck, T et al. (2001) New tools in comparative political economy: the database of political institutions. The World Bank Economic Review 15(1), 165176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Besley, T and Case, A (1995) Does electoral accountability affect economic policy choices? Evidence from gubernatorial term limits. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 110(3), 769798.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bisgaard, M and Slothuus, R (2018) Partisan elites as culprits? How party cues shape partisan perceptual gaps. American Journal of Political Science 62(2), 456469.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blom-Hansen, J, Houlberg, K and Serritzlew, S (2014) Size, democracy, and the economic costs of running the political system. American Journal of Political Science 58(4), 790803.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brambor, T, Clark, WR and Golder, M (2006) Understanding interaction models: improving empirical analyses. Political Analysis 14(1), 6382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breen, R (1999) Beliefs, rational choice and Bayesian learning. Rationality and Society 11(4), 463479.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, S and Lebo, MJ (2006) Election cycles and the economic voter. Political Research Quarterly 59(4), 543556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Debus, M, Stegmaier, M and Tosun, J (2014) Economic voting under coalition governments: evidence from Germany. Political Science Research and Methods 2(1), 4967.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duch, RM and Stevenson, RT (2008) The Economic Vote: How Political and Economic Institutions Condition Election Results. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, G and Pickup, M (2010) Reversing the causal arrow: the political conditioning of economic perceptions in the 2000–2004 US presidential election cycle. The Journal of Politics 72(4), 12361251.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, G and Andersen, R (2006) The political conditioning of economic perceptions. Journal of Politics 68(1), 194207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, SD and Hobolt, SB (2010) Coalition government and electoral accountability. Electoral Studies 29(3), 358369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerber, A and Green, D (1999) Misperceptions about perceptual bias. Annual Review of Political Science 2(1), 189210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Granato, J et al. (2015) EITM: an assessment with an application to economic voting. Electoral Studies 40, 372393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hainmueller, J, Mummolo, J and Xu, Y (2016) How Much Should We Trust Estimates from Multiplicative Interaction Models? Simple Tools to Improve Empirical Practice. Available from http://web.stanford.edu/~jhain/research.htm (accessed 23 May 2016).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Healy, A and Lenz, GS (2014) Substituting the end for the whole: why voters respond primarily to the election-year economy. American Journal of Political Science 58(1), 3147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Healy, A and Malhotra, N (2013) Retrospective voting reconsidered. Annual Review of Political Science 16, 285306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heisig, JP and Schaeffer, M (2019) Why you should always include a random slope for the lower-level variable involved in a cross-level interaction. European Sociological Review 35(2), 258279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hellwig, T and Marinova, DM (2015) More misinformed than myopic: economic retrospections and the voter's time horizon. Political Behavior 37(4), 865887.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hellwig, T and Samuels, D (2007) Voting in open economies the electoral consequences of globalization. Comparative Political Studies 40(3), 283306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hellwig, T and Samuels, D (2008) Electoral accountability and the variety of democratic regimes. British Journal of Political Science 38(1), 6590.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hellwig, TT (2001) Interdependence, government constraints, and economic voting. The Journal of Politics 63(04), 11411162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, SJ (2017) Learning together slowly: Bayesian learning about political facts. The Journal of Politics 79(4), 14031418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hjermitslev, IB (2018) The electoral cost of coalition participation: can anyone escape? Party Politics. Doi:10.1177/1354068818794216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kayser, MA (2005) Who surfs, who manipulates? The determinants of opportunistic election timing and electorally motivated economic intervention. American Political Science Review 99(1), 1727.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kayser, MA and Wlezien, C (2011) Performance pressure: patterns of partisanship and the economic vote. European Journal of Political Research 50(3), 365394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kayser, MA and Peress, M (2012) Benchmarking across borders: electoral accountability and the necessity of comparison. American Political Science Review 106(3), 661684.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kramer, GH (1983) The ecological fallacy revisited: aggregate-versus individual-level findings on economics and elections, and sociotropic voting. American Political Science Review 77(1), 92111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsen, MV (2019) “Replication Data for: Incumbent Tenure Crowds Out Economic Voting”, https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/EB1T26, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:Wk7kZFxDbWKBCL6TNJncdw== [fileUNF]Google Scholar
Lebo, MJ and Cassino, D (2007) The aggregated consequences of motivated reasoning and the dynamics of partisan presidential approval. Political Psychology 28(6), 719746.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lebo, MJ and Box-Steffensmeier, JM (2008) Dynamic conditional correlations in political science. American Journal of Political Science 52(3), 688704.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis-Beck, MS (1990) Economics and Elections: The Major Western Democracies. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis-Beck, MS and Stegmaier, M (2013) The VP-function revisited: a survey of the literature on vote and popularity functions after over 40 years. Public Choice 157(3–4), 367385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis-Beck, MS, Nadeau, R and Elias, A (2008) Economics, party, and the vote: causality issues and panel data. American Journal of Political Science 52(1), 8495.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lobo, MC and Lewis-Beck, MS (2012) The integration hypothesis: how the European Union shapes economic voting. Electoral Studies 31(3), 522528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lodge, M and Taber, CS (2013) The Rationalizing Voter. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacKuen, MB, Erikson, RS and Stimson, JA (1992) Peasants or bankers? The American electorate and the US economy. American Political Science Review 86(3), 597611.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malhotra, N and Kuo, AG (2008) Attributing blame: the public's response to Hurricane Katrina. The Journal of Politics 70(1), 120135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadeau, R and Lewis-Beck, MS (2001) National economic voting in US presidential elections. Journal of Politics 63(1), 159181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadeau, R, Lewis-Beck, MS and Bélanger, É (2013) Economics and elections revisited. Comparative Political Studies 46(5), 551573.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadeau, R, Niemi, RG and Yoshinaka, A (2002) A cross-national analysis of economic voting: taking account of the political context across time and nations. Electoral Studies 21(3), 403423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nannestad, P and Paldam, M (1994) The VP-function: a survey of the literature on vote and popularity functions after 25 years. Public Choice 79(3–4), 213245.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nordhaus, WD (1975) The political business cycle. The Review of Economic Studies 42(2), 169190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paldam, M (1991) How robust is the vote function? A study of seventeen nations over four decades. In Norpoth, Lewis-Beck and Lafay, (eds), Economics and Politics: The Calculus of Support. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, pp. 931.Google Scholar
Paldam, M and Skott, P (1995) A rational-voter explanation of the cost of ruling. Public Choice 83(1–2), 159172.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker-Stephen, E (2013) Clarity of responsibility and economic evaluations. Electoral Studies 32(3), 506511.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powell, GB and Whitten, GD (1993) A cross-national analysis of economic voting: taking account of the political context. American Journal of Political Science 37(02), 391414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Samuels, D (2004) Presidentialism and accountability for the economy in comparative perspective. American Political Science Review 98(3), 425436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Samuels, D and Hellwig, T (2010) Elections and accountability for the economy: a conceptual and empirical reassessment. Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties 20(4), 393419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singer, MM and Carlin, RE (2013) Context counts: the election cycle, development, and the nature of economic voting. Journal of Politics 75(3), 730742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, A (2003) Election timing in majoritarian parliaments. British Journal of Political Science 33(03), 397418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soroka, SN (2006) Good news and bad news: asymmetric responses to economic information. Journal of Politics 68(2), 372385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stegmaier, M and Williams, LK (2016) Forecasting the 2015 British election through party popularity functions. Electoral Studies 41, 260263.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevenson, RT (2002) The cost of ruling, cabinet duration, and the “median-gap” model. Public Choice 113(1–2), 157178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tilley, J and Hobolt, SB (2011) Is the government to blame? An experimental test of how partisanship shapes perceptions of performance and responsibility. The Journal of Politics 73(2), 316330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Brug, W, Van der Eijk, C and Franklin, MN (2007) The Economy and the Vote: Economic Conditions and Elections in Fifteen Countries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vries, CE and Giger, N (2014) Holding governments accountable? Individual heterogeneity in performance voting. European Journal of Political Research 53(2), 345362.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitten, GD and Palmer, HD (1999) Cross-national analyses of economic voting. Electoral Studies 18(1), 4967.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Bank. 2018 GDP growth (annual %). World Development Indicators. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/ny.gdp.mktp.kd.zg (accessed 9 August 2019).Google Scholar
Supplementary material: Link

Larsen Dataset

Link
Supplementary material: PDF

Larsen supplementary material

Larsen supplementary material

Download Larsen supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 352.9 KB