To understand the extent to which partisan majorities in Congress influence economic policy, we compare financial market responses in recent midterm elections to Presidential elections. We use prediction markets that track election outcomes as a means of precisely timing and calibrating the arrival of news, allowing substantially more precise estimates than a traditional event study methodology. We find that equity values, oil prices, and Treasury yields are slightly higher with Republican majorities in Congress, and that a switch in the majority party in a chamber of Congress has an impact that is only 10%—30% of that of the Presidency. We also find evidence inconsistent with the popular view that divided government is better for equities, finding instead that equity valuations increase monotonically, albeit slightly, with the degree of Republican control.
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13 August 2007
Research Article|
August 13 2007
Party Influence in Congress and the Economy* Available to Purchase
Justin Wolfers;
Justin Wolfers
Wharton—University of Pennsylvania CEPR, IZA and NBER
, USA
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Eric Zitzewitz
Eric Zitzewitz
Stanford GSB
, CA, USA
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Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2007 E. Snowberg, J. Wolfers and E. Zitzewitz
2007
E. Snowberg, J. Wolfers and E. Zitzewitz
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2007) 2 (3): 277–286.
Citation
Snowberg E, Wolfers J, Zitzewitz E (2007), "Party Influence in Congress and the Economy*". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 2 No. 3 pp. 277–286, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00006060
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