One of the central concepts in the study of political leadership, particularly in international relations, is individual experience (Bak and Palmer Reference Bak and Palmer2010; Horowitz, McDermott and Stam Reference Horowitz, McDermott and Stam2005; Potter Reference Potter2007). More experienced leaders are less likely to be tested by adversaries and are often found to handle international crises more competently (for example, Gelpi and Grieco Reference Gelpi and Grieco2001). If the controversial 25 July 2019 phone conversation between Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky – both political outsiders prior to assuming office – is any evidence, less experienced leaders may also be found wanting in their knowledge of diplomatic practice.Footnote 1 As the former foreign minister of Russia (1998–2004) Igor Ivanov noted, ‘a “newcomer” in international politics is usually harder to work with: the lack of experience often translates into inconsistent and unpredictable behavior; it leads to subjective, emotional and at times erroneous decisions …’ (cited in Englund Reference Englund2016).
We propose a new empirical measure of political experience at the time of selection into office. Our statistical approach differs from expert qualitative assessments as well as from studies that rely on particular proxies to account for experience, such as leaders' age (Bak and Palmer Reference Bak and Palmer2010; Horowitz, McDermott and Stam Reference Horowitz, McDermott and Stam2005), time in office (Gelpi and Grieco Reference Gelpi and Grieco2001; Potter Reference Potter2007) or type of prior career (Horowitz, McDermott and Stam Reference Horowitz, McDermott and Stam2005), or that equate specific experience with competence (Yu and Jong-A-Pin Reference Yu and Jong-A-Pin2016). Instead, we fit a Bayesian latent variable model on a range of experience-related indicators to estimate a new measure of political experience, PolEx (together with associated measures of uncertainty). We provide our estimates for 1,949 national leaders around the world from 1950 to 2017. Our measure accounts for length (years in politics), breadth (experience in formal and informal posts) and quality (types of positions).
Finally, we demonstrate the use of this new measure by investigating whether democracies select more experienced leaders than dictatorships. This is not only intrinsically interesting; it also has implications for international security, if we contrast an apparent rise of outsiders across the democratic world with more experienced leadership in countries such as China or Russia.
What Makes a Political Leader Experienced?
Generally speaking, experience is a multifaceted and nebulous term because it not only depends on age or the type of positions occupied, but also on various activities and events, as well as the individual's ability to learn from such events. A political leader may be competent across a wide range of activities, including negotiation, mentoring, organization, persuasion, strategy and public relations. These skills are acquired in a wide range of different contexts, including social and professional, political and non-political contexts. Different leaders will therefore have built up their arsenal of skills across different experiences in life, moderated by their ability to learn and other innate traits.
Can political experience be measured? We believe that, all things being equal, important political skills should be on average more developed among individuals who have held senior political posts, or held them longer. For instance, to underline President George H. W. Bush's (1989–93) level of experience, Horowitz, McDermott and Stam (Reference Horowitz, McDermott and Stam2005, 668) point out that he was a ‘director of the Central Intelligence Agency, an ambassador, and a vice president’. We can look at an individual's political biography and make an informed guess about his or her level of experience in politics.
A key challenge associated with identifying relevant prior experience is to ensure that a measurement remains valid across different regimes. While the manner in which one acquires political experience might be very different in a parliamentary democracy than it is in a military junta, we nevertheless want to be able to compare levels of experience across all regimes. Democracies may attract more educated leaders (Besley and Reynal-Querol Reference Besley and Reynal-Querol2011), while dictatorships may be led by people with non-political backgrounds, such as from the military. Clearly, individuals with traits that conform to the norms of their regime will find it easier to progress their political careers. In order to be able to generalize, however, we focus on political experience that took place explicitly and primarily in formal politics, rather than general life experience or leadership experience in the military or corporate sector, for example. We call this a prior-experience approach to political experience.
International relations research often uses age as an alternative proxy for experience (Bak and Palmer Reference Bak and Palmer2010), an approach we refer to as age-experience. Horowitz, McDermott and Stam (Reference Horowitz, McDermott and Stam2005, 664, 667) point out that older leaders have more experience and more credibility. However, the youngest leader of an EU country (32 in 2019), Sebastian Kurz of Austria, had served as foreign minister and a member of parliament for four years prior to his chancellorship, while former US President Donald Trump was 70 years old when he entered the White House but had no prior political experience.
Another common proxy is education-experience. For example, Besley and Reynal-Querol (Reference Besley and Reynal-Querol2011) argue that better education leads to more competent leaders, and demonstrate that democracies select more educated leaders than non-democracies. However, a leader with little education but years of active engagement in the party will have significantly more relevant experience than one who has a professor background, with limited experience outside of academia.
More commonly than age or education, time in office may be used as an explicit proxy for political experience (Gelpi and Grieco Reference Gelpi and Grieco2001; Horowitz, McDermott and Stam Reference Horowitz, McDermott and Stam2005; Potter Reference Potter2007). However, a focus on tenure-experience ignores prior experience and cannot explain why different regimes select leaders with different levels of experience in the first place.
While the approaches discussed above may account for general levels of experience, experience may also be more domain specific (Yu and Jong-A-Pin Reference Yu and Jong-A-Pin2016). For example, a minister of finance might have domain-experience in the finance sector. Making generic comparisons between countries, across regimes and over decades requires a formulation of political experience that is less idiosyncratic.
In summary, there is a significant amount of conceptual stretching and proxying for experience and related concepts of age, competence and tenure in office. We focus on experience in actual politics, prior-experience, before becoming a national leader.
The Data on Leaders’ Political Experience
To measure the political experience of leaders across the world, we begin with the Cursus Honorum data (Baturo Reference Baturo2016). We expand the coverage to include more than 450 additional political leaders in office before and after the range of these data, in 1950–59 and 2010–17. The resulting data set includes 1,949 individuals in office from 1 January 1950 to 31 December 2017.
Our goal is to account for the length and breadth of individuals’ involvement in politics, as well as the quality of such involvement. A key indicator of the length of experience is the number of years in formal politics. This includes years of public service, for instance as a member of parliament, minister, governor or mayor. The number of years in politics is relatively straightforward to measure in democratic regimes, provided the relevant biographical data are available. For the majority of non-democratic leaders, it requires judgement as to what constitutes service in formal politics and what the relevant positions are in a particular dictatorship. For illustration, consider Hu Jintao of China (2003–12) who has 21 years of experience. In 1982 Hu was selected as a promising young cadre for rapid promotion and became an alternate member of the Central Committee as well as the secretary of the Communist Youth League Central Committee (Ewing Reference Ewing2003, 21). Prior to 1982 he held a series of engineering jobs and served as party secretary in regional construction departments (Ewing Reference Ewing2003, 20). However, in the context of a party regime, his career prior to 1982 was more akin to that of a civil servant. Only when he became the secretary of the Communist Youth League did his political career properly begin. Subsequently, he served as a provincial party secretary in two regions, and then joined the Politburo Standing Committee. While Hu's experience is different from that of his peers in democracies, being a provincial party secretary is akin to regional governor, and sitting on a Politburo Standing Committee functionally resembles a powerful ministerial post in a democracy.
Not all politically relevant experience consists of holding formal posts. Future leaders participate in politics as political party organizers; they also participate in electoral campaigns and acquire political experience in non-political posts. Therefore, the second key variable, Total Years in Politics, relaxes the requirement of serving in formal posts and also includes years in political campaigns, years as an opposition leader, years with an active party membership and any other politics-related activity.
Experience in politics is not only about the length of service. The quality and breadth of such experience matter too. Figure 1 displays descriptive statistics about politically relevant posts the leaders have held in the past, separately for democracies and dictatorships. Democratic leaders are more likely to hold portfolios of the minister of environment, the economy or local government, or intergovernmental bodies. Dictators are more likely to have served as ministers of trade or public works, or served in the politburo, security agencies or as diplomats. Below we leverage these data to estimate latent scores of experience, PolEx.
The Latent Variable Model to Estimate PolEx
While we have a number of indicators of experience in politics, it is unclear how these add up to a single experience score. How do we weight each indicator? How much does formal experience count, relative to being ‘on the ground’ as a party activist? How much more experience does a former minister of foreign affairs have than a former minister of railroads? We address these questions by estimating a latent variable model to represent political experience, of which our various indicators are the observed implications.
Our model is different in important ways from comparable measurement models such as Treier and Jackman's (Reference Treier and Jackman2008) assessment of democracy. Democracies share a range of characteristics, and the more these are present, the more likely it can be classified as a democracy. Yet the type of political experience varies significantly between leaders. One individual may have experience as a deputy party leader, moving on to a junior minister role, to then become minister of finance and eventually the leader. Another person may reach the summit of power through an entirely different trajectory. Both might be similarly experienced overall.Footnote 2
To avoid negative correlations between different types of experience due to mutual exclusivity of posts for the same individual at the same time, we aggregate posts into broad categories. We group all posts as either general political posts (see Figure 1 for a full list) or senior political posts and ministerial positions. We create a set of dummy variables taking the value of 1 if the individual occupied at least one, two, or three of the general posts, respectively, as well as a dummy indicating whether the individual occupied any of the senior posts. In addition, we include two variables counting the number of years of political experience – one for formal posts only and another more broadly defined – as well as a variable counting the number of times an individual has served as the national leader in the past. The diagram in Figure 2 outlines our measurement model specification. While individuals’ career trajectories will differ, more experienced leaders will have held more posts, for longer, at more senior levels. Reducing the model to generic count variables and dummies allows us to estimate the latent variable model in a similar vein as Treier and Jackman (Reference Treier and Jackman2008).
Aside from the estimation issues caused by the mutual exclusivity of different posts at the same time, this aggregation also maximizes the validity and comparability across regimes by raising the level of abstraction (Sartori Reference Sartori1970). The length of experience, the number of senior posts and the number of political posts – whatever these posts might be – on average should generate a valid cross-regime measurement. Anything else makes comparing experience by drawing from observational biographical data across regimes close to impossible. While the richness of experience between different national leaders is important and interesting, incorporating that richness makes it infeasible to measure political experience across regime types. Even though detailed types of offices and pathways cannot be seen from our measure, on average, high scores should correspond to higher levels of political experience.
We estimate PolEx using a Bayesian framework that allows us to obtain full posterior information on uncertainty for each individual score. Our model can be seen as a set of simultaneous regression equations, where the same latent variable explains the various indicator variables.
Because it is reasonable to assume that an individual's initial experience will be more significant than later additional years, we apply an inverse hyperbolic sine transformation – akin to a logarithmic transformation – on the three count variables. For the transformed count variables, we assume a normal distribution, while for the dummy variables we use a logistic specification. Each equation contains a discrimination parameter, with a prior β 1 ~ Γ(2, 1) and a difficulty parameter with prior β 0 ~ N(0, 1).Footnote 3 For example, for the experience in years indicator we have:
with EY* the observed experience in years, after the inverse hyperbolic transformation. The latent variable itself has a prior distribution of γ ~ N(0, 1). This follows the two-parameter logistic formulation of the item response theory model (Glockner-Rist and Hoijtink Reference Glockner-Rist and Hoijtink2003), which is equivalent to a factor analysis model with binary or mixed responses (Quinn Reference Quinn2004). As in other applications in political science, the focus is on the latent variable scores for each observation, as opposed to the discrimination parameters that are the focus in psychometric applications (Clinton, Jackman and Rivers Reference Clinton, Jackman and Rivers2004). The model is estimated using the No-U-Turn Sampler algorithm (Carpenter et al. Reference Carpenter2017), using eight chains of 20,000 iterations, of which 4,000 are discarded as a warm-up.Footnote 4
Table 1 provides estimates of the discrimination and difficulty parameters. Difficulty parameters capture the extent to which, on average, leaders obtain a high level of experience on the particular indicator. Discrimination parameters, equivalent to factor loadings, capture the extent to which items are able to separate experienced and inexperienced leaders, but they cannot be directly compared between those for continuous variables and those for binary variables. To compare the relative importance of component variables, we can visualize the predicted values on the component variables given the latent variable score based on item response curves, which are presented in Figure 3.
Note: standard errors for the model parameters in parentheses.
All those who are scored as having above-average experience at the time of entering office tend to have had at least one prior political post. In turn, those with higher levels of experience also typically tend to have had a senior post or ministry. Having had multiple prior posts is less common. Among those at the highest levels of PolEx there is only just over a 60 per cent chance of having had three prior political posts. We also observe a strong relationship between PolEx and years of experience in formal and informal politics.
As a test of face validity, Figure 4 maps the PolEx scores of all leaders in the world in 2017, while Figure 5 provides additional detail on the most and least experienced leaders in the world in 2017. In both cases, leaders in office in 2017 are included, while their level of experience at the time they came to office is assessed. The results are intuitive as we can distinguish between experienced leaders such as Xi Jinping of China and inexperienced leaders such as Trump of the US.
Regime Type and the Experience of Political Leaders
The PolEx scores allow us to address a research question posed earlier: do democracies select more politically experienced leaders? Figure 6 reveals that over time and on average, democracies outperform dictatorships. However, the stark differences visible until the mid-1980s have been replaced with a smaller gap in this century as dictatorships came to recruit more experienced leaders, finally closing the gap in recent years.Footnote 5 If democratic leadership becomes relatively less experienced, democracies may find themselves at a disadvantage in settings where leadership matters, such as in international diplomacy.
Conclusions
Current scholarship has gone beyond the ‘leaders matter’ argument to examine exactly which leader characteristics and experience matter for survival in office (Yu and Jong-A-Pin Reference Yu and Jong-A-Pin2016), post-office employment (Baturo Reference Baturo2017) or conflict behaviour (Horowitz, McDermott and Stam Reference Horowitz, McDermott and Stam2005). Empirical scholars can now rely on the PolEx score to investigate whether leaders' experience affects policy outcomes. A nebulous and unobservable variable such as political experience is difficult to measure, particularly across regime types. Our prior-experience approach draws on a new data set on nearly 2,000 national leaders to estimate PolEx, a latent experience score. Measurement equivalence across democratic and non-democratic regimes is established by demonstrating the high correlation between latent scores whether estimated jointly or separately by regime type (see Appendix Section 3.1). We establish that democracies tend to select more experienced leaders than non-democracies, but that this distinction has diminished over time.
Supplementary material
Online appendices are available at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123421000107.
Data availability statement
The data for the estimation of the model, as well as the resulting estimated PolEx scores and their 95 per cent equal tailed credible intervals can be found in Harvard Dataverse at: https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/NRC1ZD.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the editor and anonymous reviewers, as well as Matthew Kerby, Iain McMenamin, Michael Horowitz, Julia Gray, and the late Robert Elgie for their helpful comments and advice. This article was presented at the General Conference of the European Consortium for Political Research, Hamburg, 2018, and we are grateful for the excellent feedback at the conference. We also thank Jonathan Arlow for excellent research assistance.
Financial support
We acknowledge the receipt of Dublin City University Enhancing Performance Award.