We leverage the natural experiment afforded by tornado incidence to estimate the effect of exogenous economic loss on electoral outcomes. We find that voters punish the incumbent party in presidential elections for economic damage resulting from tornadoes. Although this behavior could suggest that retrospective voting in this domain reflects voters irrationally blaming incumbent politicians for circumstances beyond their control, we instead find evidence suggesting that voting behavior reflects democratic competence. First, voters do not punish the incumbent party for tornado-caused deaths, which governments likely do not have the power to address with effective policy. Second, the incumbent party only appears to lose votes when no disaster declaration takes place in response to the tornado. Thus, voters appear to be rewarding and punishing government with respect to its performance in handling the disaster, as opposed to blaming the government for these natural events.
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11 August 2010
Research Article|
August 11 2010
Random Events, Economic Losses, and Retrospective Voting: Implications for Democratic Competence* Available to Purchase
Andrew Healy;
Andrew Healy
Assistant Professor of Economics,
Loyola Marymount University
, 1 LMU Drive, University Hall 4229, Los Angeles, CA 90045, USA
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Neil Malhotra
Neil Malhotra
Associate Professor of Political Science,
University of Pennsylvania
, 208 S. 37th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
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We thank Alan Gerber, Peter Hinrichs, Jonathan Rodden, Laura Stoker, Ebonya Washington, Er Werker, and participants at the 2008 Midwest Political Science Association for their helpful com ments on earlier versions of this paper.
Received:
August 27 2009
Accepted:
May 12 2010
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2010 A. Healy and N. Malhotra
2010
A. Healy and N. Malhotra
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2010) 5 (2): 193–208.
Article history
Received:
August 27 2009
Accepted:
May 12 2010
Citation
Healy A, Malhotra N (2010), "Random Events, Economic Losses, and Retrospective Voting: Implications for Democratic Competence*". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 5 No. 2 pp. 193–208, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00009057
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