Economic perceptions and voting behavior in US presidential elections

The economic voting literature disagrees over the exogeneity of economic perceptions on individual electoral behavior. One side argues that economic perceptions are driven by partisan dispositions, which then calls into question the substantive importance of this factor in assessing electoral behavi...

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Main Authors: Colin Lewis-Beck, Nicholas F. Martini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-12-01
Series:Research & Politics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168020972811
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spelling doaj-56fcc07e8506429081b564accf7bb0302020-12-22T00:33:50ZengSAGE PublishingResearch & Politics2053-16802020-12-01710.1177/2053168020972811Economic perceptions and voting behavior in US presidential electionsColin Lewis-BeckNicholas F. MartiniThe economic voting literature disagrees over the exogeneity of economic perceptions on individual electoral behavior. One side argues that economic perceptions are driven by partisan dispositions, which then calls into question the substantive importance of this factor in assessing electoral behavior. A second side argues that voters rationally assess the economy and accurately use this information to inform their electoral behavior. This article addresses this disagreement by disentangling economic perceptions from partisan dispositions. Using data from the American National Election Study from 1968 to 2016, we link objective macroeconomic indicators to individual economic perceptions, and then assess its explanatory power on vote choice in US presidential elections. The results indicate that objective economic perceptions have a substantive impact on support for incumbent candidates. Moreover, the estimated effect sizes are consistent with previous research estimating the relative importance of party identification and economic perceptions on vote choice.https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168020972811
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Colin Lewis-Beck
Nicholas F. Martini
spellingShingle Colin Lewis-Beck
Nicholas F. Martini
Economic perceptions and voting behavior in US presidential elections
Research & Politics
author_facet Colin Lewis-Beck
Nicholas F. Martini
author_sort Colin Lewis-Beck
title Economic perceptions and voting behavior in US presidential elections
title_short Economic perceptions and voting behavior in US presidential elections
title_full Economic perceptions and voting behavior in US presidential elections
title_fullStr Economic perceptions and voting behavior in US presidential elections
title_full_unstemmed Economic perceptions and voting behavior in US presidential elections
title_sort economic perceptions and voting behavior in us presidential elections
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Research & Politics
issn 2053-1680
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The economic voting literature disagrees over the exogeneity of economic perceptions on individual electoral behavior. One side argues that economic perceptions are driven by partisan dispositions, which then calls into question the substantive importance of this factor in assessing electoral behavior. A second side argues that voters rationally assess the economy and accurately use this information to inform their electoral behavior. This article addresses this disagreement by disentangling economic perceptions from partisan dispositions. Using data from the American National Election Study from 1968 to 2016, we link objective macroeconomic indicators to individual economic perceptions, and then assess its explanatory power on vote choice in US presidential elections. The results indicate that objective economic perceptions have a substantive impact on support for incumbent candidates. Moreover, the estimated effect sizes are consistent with previous research estimating the relative importance of party identification and economic perceptions on vote choice.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168020972811
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