nep-pol New Economics Papers
on Positive Political Economics
Issue of 2026–03–23
nineteen papers chosen by
Eugene Beaulieu, University of Calgary


  1. Legacies of the Reformation: How Religious Identity Shapes Political Preferences in Germany By Erik Ortiz-Covarrubias
  2. When Money Can ’t Buy Political Love: Lab Experiments on Vote Buying in Ghana and Uganda By Burbidge, Dominic; Cheeseman, Nic; Panin, Amma
  3. Financial Markets and Mass Political Attitudes: Evidence from the 2022 Brazilian Election By Brooks, Sarah M.; Cunha, Raphael; Mosley, Layna
  4. The Pulpit and the Polls: The Electoral Impact of Religious Participation By Cools, Angela; Moreno-Medina, Jonathan; Sheng, Sam
  5. Candidate Moderation under Instant Runoff and Condorcet Voting: Evidence from the Cooperative Election Study By David McCune; Matthew I. Jones; Andy Schultz; Adam Graham-Squire; Ismar Volic; Belle See; Karen Xiao; Malavika Mukundan
  6. The Global Incumbency Advantage By Raphaël Descamps; Benjamin Marx; Vincent Pons; Vincent Rollet
  7. Mutual Party Extremism By Ivo Welch
  8. The Unintended Consequences of Post-Disaster Policies By Eunjee Kwon; Marcel Henkel; Pierre Magontier
  9. Populism in the Italian Municipal Elections: the M5S experience. By Massimo Bordignon; Tommaso Colussi
  10. Why Cross-Pressured Voters Are Always Right: Media and Mediators By da Silva, Lucas Paulo
  11. "What Kind of Bias Do I Want?" How Cross-Pressured Voters Select Political Media By da Silva, Lucas Paulo
  12. Online Media Outlets Struggle to Represent Audiences in a Two-Dimensional Ideological Landscape By da Silva, Lucas Paulo
  13. Missing Men and Women’s Demand for Political Representation By Barbara Boelmann; Carola Stapper
  14. Animosity is for the Audience: How Social Context Shapes Expressions of Political Hostility By Lelkes, Yphtach; Ahn, Chloe; Huang, Shengchun
  15. Political Identity and Consumer Behaviour: Musk and Tesla in Germany By Buggle, Johannes; Butschek, Sebastian; Tenschert, Elian
  16. The Subnational Politics Project: Addressing Subnational Data Challenges in Comparative Politics By Agustina Giraudy; Guadalupe González
  17. Repression By Gerard Padró I Miquel; Nancy Qian
  18. Loaded Chambers: Organized Interests, Public Opinion, and Policy Responsiveness in the American States By Takuma Iwasaki; Eric A. Baldwin; John J. Donohue; Tai Markman
  19. Quieted by Questions: The Unintended Consequences of Survey Interviews on Protest in Africa By Kikuta, Kyosuke; Kurosawa, Hiroki

  1. By: Erik Ortiz-Covarrubias (CEMFI, Centro de Estudios Monetarios y Financieros)
    Abstract: This paper investigates whether Germany’s historical confessional divides continue to influence contemporary political behavior by exploiting persistent geographic variation between historically Catholic and Protestant areas through a Geographic Regression Discontinuity Design. Integrating historical and geospatial data with modern electoral and census sources, I find that historically Catholic municipalities show systematically higher support for the center-right Union parties than their counterparts in every federal election from 1990 to 2025, while historically Protestant areas are more likely to support parties on the center-left and left of the political spectrum. Individual-level survey data covering all Federal Elections since 1953 and the German General Social Survey provide suggestive evidence that voting behavior is shaped by confessional affiliation.
    Keywords: Religion, voting behavior, Germany.
    JEL: O18 N33 D72 Z12 Z13
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cmf:wpaper:wp2026_2604
  2. By: Burbidge, Dominic (University of Oxford); Cheeseman, Nic (University of Birmingham); Panin, Amma (Université catholique de Louvain, LIDAM/CORE, Belgium)
    Abstract: Reciprocity lies at the heart of vote buying but its exact role is nuanced. Politicians often offer money in exchange for votes. Yet citizens who reject bribery in the context of democratic political processes might view the exchange of money for votes as illegitimate, even if they enjoy reciprocal relationships with similar figures in other contexts. We test for the willingness of individuals to accept or reject electoral bribes using lab-in-the-field experiments in Ghana and Uganda. Participants play the roles of voters and candidates. Some candidates can offer a bribe before the vote. Voters are 14 percentage points more likely to vote for a candidate who had the opportunity to bribe but refrained from doing so. Cross-nationally, we draw on unique survey data that demonstrates respondents are more likely to reward non-bribing candidates in Ghana where there is a higher quality of democracy and stronger support for democratic norms and values. Individually, we find that voters who have had positive experiences and attitudes towards elections were more likely to vote for a candidate who did not bribe them. Taken together, these findings suggest that the lab-in-the-field results are best explained by the prevalence of democratic values among some respondents.
    Keywords: Elections ; Vote-buying ; Bribery ; Lab-in-the-field experiment ; Ghana ; Uganda
    JEL: D72 O55
    Date: 2025–03–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cor:louvco:2025005
  3. By: Brooks, Sarah M. (Ohio State University); Cunha, Raphael (King's College London); Mosley, Layna
    Abstract: How do financial markets affect mass attitudes toward candidates in democratic elections? We theorize that, especially in financially open countries in the Global South, voters respond to financial market assessments of candidates for national election. We expect that they do so via two mechanisms: first, voters may be aware that financial market movements can affect material outcomes, such as the prospects for future economic growth and the likelihood of debt distress. Second, voters rely on financial markets for cues regarding candidates' economic policy competence. Using data from an original randomized survey experiment conducted during the 2022 Brazilian presidential election campaign, we find evidence for both the material and the cue-taking mechanisms. Our results identify a previously underappreciated way in which financial markets can affect domestic politics, viz., through their influence on citizens' attitudes toward political candidates.
    Date: 2026–03–17
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:8b5r6_v1
  4. By: Cools, Angela; Moreno-Medina, Jonathan (University of Texas at San Antonio); Sheng, Sam
    Abstract: We estimate how exposure to religious services affects U.S. voting. Novel sermon corpora show a sharp spike in political content on the Sunday before presidential elections. Exploiting quasi-random rainfall during typical service hours before elections—Precipitation at Time of Church (PTC)—and controlling for election day and weekly precipitation, a one–standard deviation increase in PTC lowers county Republican vote share by 0.6 percentage points. The effect is driven by reduced Republican turnout. Individual-level estimates confirm that effects concentrate among church-attending Christians—particularly White Evangelicals—and are absent for non-churchgoers who face the same weather, consistent with church-based mobilization.
    Date: 2026–03–17
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:ahky7_v1
  5. By: David McCune; Matthew I. Jones; Andy Schultz; Adam Graham-Squire; Ismar Volic; Belle See; Karen Xiao; Malavika Mukundan
    Abstract: This article extends the analysis of Atkinson, Foley, and Ganz in "Beyond the Spoiler Effect: Can Ranked-Choice Voting Solve the Problem of Political Polarization?". Their work uses a one-dimensional spatial model based on survey data from the Cooperative Election Survey (CES) to examine how instant-runoff voting (IRV) and Condorcet methods promote candidate moderation. Their model assumes an idealized electoral environment in which all voters possess complete information regarding candidates' ideological positions, all voters provide complete preference rankings, etc. Under these assumptions, their results indicate that Condorcet methods tend to yield winners who are substantially more moderate than those produced by IRV. We construct new models based on CES data which take into account more realistic voter behavior, such as the presence of partial ballots. Our general finding is that under more realistic models the differences between Condorcet methods and IRV largely disappear, implying that in real-world settings the moderating effect of Condorcet methods may not be nearly as strong as what is suggested by more theoretical models.
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2603.03619
  6. By: Raphaël Descamps; Benjamin Marx; Vincent Pons; Vincent Rollet
    Abstract: This paper explores the global incumbency advantage. We first show that existing subnational estimates of the incumbency advantage correlate positively with GDP per capita and democratic quality, and negatively with corruption across countries. Building on this meta-analysis, we then consider all presidential and parliamentary elections held since 1945 to estimate how a national electoral victory affects the probability that winning parties and candidates retain power beyond the term for which they were elected. On average, national election winners benefit from an incumbency advantage, but this effect is short-lived and differs markedly across contexts: it is large in Africa, North America, and Western Europe, but muted or even reversed in other regions. We explore how standard incumbency effects and electoral manipulation contribute to these results. In established democracies, the national incumbency advantage reflects gains in the subsequent electoral performance of election winners. In less democratic regimes, it mainly stems from manipulation of the fairness and the timing of elections. Overall, this advantage is largest in both the most and the least democratic countries, due to radically different types of equilibria.
    JEL: D72 O43 P0
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:34968
  7. By: Ivo Welch
    Abstract: With four political candidates competing first in two primaries and then in a general election, even a modestly polarized electorate can sustain (in equilibrium) much more extremist candidates. However, a party can sustain extremism only if the other side is extreme, too. A small moderation of one side’s voting electorate can trigger a discontinuous collapse of candidate extremism on both sides — a “moderation export” effect. The converse is also true: minute increases in voter polarization on the more moderate side can trigger radical candidate extremism on both sides. Principled candidates can destroy party electability. Distance-related voter abstention favors extremism.
    JEL: D71 D72
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:34967
  8. By: Eunjee Kwon; Marcel Henkel; Pierre Magontier
    Abstract: We document that U.S. hurricanes striking close to Election Day trigger larger public spending responses and sustained population inflows than comparable hurricanes occurring between elections. Exploiting quasi-random variation in hurricane timing, we show that electoral incentives shape post- disaster policy with lasting spatial consequences. A quantitative spatial equilibrium model implies that eliminating these electoral timing distortions would raise aggregate welfare by 0.025%, but the aggregate gain masks an 18:1 asymmetry in per-capita stakes between losers and gainers. This distributional asymmetry rationalizes the persistence of these electoral distortions.
    Keywords: natural disasters, political budget cycles
    JEL: Q54 D72 H53 H84
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bge:wpaper:1566
  9. By: Massimo Bordignon (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore; Dipartimento di Economia e Finanza, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore); Tommaso Colussi (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore; Dipartimento di Economia e Finanza, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore)
    Abstract: This paper reviews a growing body of theoretical and empirical research on Italian populism through a detailed examination of the Five Star Movement (Movimento 5 Stelle, M5S), focusing on its experience in municipal elections. Using a wide range of administrative and survey data, as well as theoretical modelling, the paper analyses the determinants of M5S success in municipal elections. The evidence shows that while the dual-ballot system initially favored M5S candidates, their time in municipal office was short-lived, as M5S incumbents were less likely to be re-elected than mayors from traditional parties. This electoral decline is linked not only to the loss of ideological ambiguity but also to weak administrative performance. The analysis further documents a lasting populist legacy in the form of reduced trust in democratic institutions following M5S local governance. Evidence from the COVID-19 period further shows that targeted redistributive policies reduced support for populist parties. Overall, these findings highlight the importance of institutional context in shaping populist success, the governance challenges faced by outsider movements, and the conditions under which populist support can be contained or reversed.
    Keywords: Populism; Municipal elections; Five Star Movement; Electoral institutions.
    JEL: D72 D73 H70
    Date: 2026–02
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ctc:serie1:def150
  10. By: da Silva, Lucas Paulo (Trinity College Dublin)
    Abstract: Cross-pressured voters (CPVs) are a large demographic that usually faces ideological trade-offs when voting. They are either economically leftist and culturally conservative ('left-conservatives') or economically rightist and culturally progressive ('right-progressives'). Despite being ideological opposites, both left-conservatives and right-progressives usually support right-conservative parties. Past research suggests that CPVs are 'persuadable voters', but this is the first study to examine whether media actually influences their voting behaviour. I test whether media exposure alters three 'spatial voting mediators' among CPVs -- their own ideological positions, perceptions of party positions, and salience -- and consequently their voting behaviour. To examine these relationships, I administer a pre-registered survey among British CPVs and integrate panel data from the UK, US, and Germany. The results demonstrate that media exposure influences CPVs considerably by altering spatial voting mediators. The implications of these findings are powerful, shedding light on contemporary electoral shifts, especially in favour of right-conservative parties.
    Date: 2026–03–18
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:cyhsm_v1
  11. By: da Silva, Lucas Paulo (Trinity College Dublin)
    Abstract: Media selection is an important form of political behavior that often shapes public opinion and voting. While most people select like-minded media, recent evidence suggests that media markets do not represent the growing populations of cross-pressured voters (CPVs) with "mixed" ideological positions. CPVs consist of two groups: "left-conservatives" are economically leftist and culturally conservative, while "right-progressives" are the reverse. Since CPVs are under-represented by political media outlets, how do they select outlets and content? My theory draws on another type of political behavior -- voting -- and adapts the prominent spatial voting model to political media selection. Hence, I argue that salience shapes outlet selection. Moreover, within an outlet, both salience and outlet ideology influence content selection. I administer a pre-registered survey to British CPVs that simulates the media selection process with two experiments. This is supplemented by large-scale, representative panel data from the UK, US, and Germany. My results indicate that (1) CPVs usually select right-conservative outlets, (2) salience likely has some influence over content selection within outlets, and (3) outlet ideology has a powerful effect on content selection. However, surprisingly, salience might not drive the initial outlet selection process, pointing to new avenues for research. This study has important implications for selective exposure, media effects, public opinion, and voting behavior.
    Date: 2026–03–18
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:6rxve_v1
  12. By: da Silva, Lucas Paulo (Trinity College Dublin)
    Abstract: A well-established literature finds that media outlets align their ideological positions with those of their audiences. However, can outlets do this in a two-dimensional (economic/cultural) ideological landscape? This is among the most common and parsimonious models of ideology within political science. I predict that outlets under-represent cross-pressured voters (CPVs) -- people with leftist economic positions and conservative cultural positions ("left-conservatives") or the reverse ("right-progressives"). Despite large CPV populations, I argue that outlets are constrained from representing them by the structures of media actors and party systems. I construct a novel corpus of one million articles. These are quasi-randomly selected from the universe of Anglophone internet media articles. Using large language models and a new ideological classification technique, this study measures the separate economic and cultural positions of 324 prominent media outlets from 26 countries. This data provides interesting descriptive results about the two-dimensional positions of these outlets overall and across time. Moreover, the study then tests (1) the relationship between the economic and cultural dimensions, (2) how this structure changes over time, and (3) its association with audience ideological structure. The results indicate that many media outlets are unrepresentative and unresponsive to audiences in a two-dimensional ideological landscape. This has important implications for our understanding of media ideology in general and media effects among CPVs.
    Date: 2026–03–18
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:mzxab_v1
  13. By: Barbara Boelmann (University of Cologne & RWI Leibniz Instiute for Economic Research); Carola Stapper (Johannes Kepler University Linz)
    Abstract: Over the past century, women have gained formal political rights, yet remain under-represented in leadership—partly due to lower demand for representation among women themselves. In this paper, we shift the perspective from why men extended political rights to women toward what shaped women’s own demand for representation. Specifically, we study how male absence during World War I affected German women’s demand for the franchise, exploiting exogenous variation in drafting intensity across regions for identification. To make demand for political representation directly measurable, we construct a newly digitised panel dataset of the universe of German suffragette clubs—a revealed-preference measure of demand, given the considerable costs of maintaining a club, especially under wartime restrictions on political activism. Our results show that women were more likely to keep suffragette clubs open in counties with greater male absence. This effect is driven by regions where women publicly led war relief efforts, pointing to agency and specifically women’s experience in visible leadership roles as the central mechanism. We further show that this demand for representation persisted after the franchise was extended, with women more likely to run for parliament and to vote in counties with greater wartime male absence and a suffragette club.
    Keywords: Waomen's political representation, suffrage movement, agency
    JEL: J16 N44 D71
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ajk:ajkdps:396
  14. By: Lelkes, Yphtach; Ahn, Chloe; Huang, Shengchun (University of Texas at Austin)
    Abstract: Partisan vitriol has become a defining feature of American politics, evident in survey responses and social media discourse. Conventional wisdom holds that these expressions reflect deeply rooted hostility. Yet they may also function as social signals, reinforcing loyalty and conformity within partisan groups. In this view, animosity is less about entrenched ideological divisions and more about fostering cohesion among co-partisans. We test this proposition in two settings. First, using the 2012 American National Election Studies, which recorded interviewer partisanship, we exploit within-interviewer variation to examine whether respondents adjusted their reported hostility depending on the partisan identity of their interviewer. Respondents expressed significantly more animosity when interviewed by a co-partisan and less when facing an opposing-partisan interviewer. Second, in an online experiment with 1, 510 participants, we find that revealing a partner’s partisan alignment—when it matched the participant’s—encouraged more frequent out-group attacks and in-group promotion. These behaviours were strongly shaped by social norms: participants were substantially more likely to attack when their partner had done so in the previous round. Together, these findings suggest that partisan hostility is contingent on immediate social context, not solely on deeply held animus.
    Date: 2026–03–14
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:9tseb_v1
  15. By: Buggle, Johannes (University of Innsbruck); Butschek, Sebastian (University of Innsbruck); Tenschert, Elian (University of Innsbruck)
    Abstract: We study how a political identity shock affects high-stakes consumption choices. Late in 2024, Elon Musk endorsed Germany’s far-right Alternative für Deutschland. We document that after this, Tesla sales rose by up to 30 percent in right-leaning districts relative to left-leaning ones, without measurable substitution to other electric vehicles. Divestment in second-hand markets shows no partisan differences, consistent with resale requiring a larger identity cost from Tesla's image shock than non-purchase. Our lower bound-estimate for the overall loss in Tesla sales is 6500 vehicles in the first half of 2025, worth at least €241 million.
    Keywords: consumer identity, political polarization, Elon Musk
    JEL: D12 P16 Z13
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18458
  16. By: Agustina Giraudy (American University and School of Social Sciences and Government, Tecnológico de Monterrey); Guadalupe González (University of Maryland, College Park and School of Government and Public Transformation, Tecnológico de Monterrey)
    Abstract: Este artículo presenta el Subnational Politics Project, una base de datos comparada sobre política subnacional en Argentina, Brasil y México entre 1983 y 2024. El proyecto integra información sobre ejecutivos, legislaturas y democracia subnacional, y muestra su utilidad para analizar autoritarismo local, composición legislativa y desigualdad territorial en la calidad de la democracia.
    Keywords: subnational politics, subnational democracy, federalism, legislative politics, comparative politics, Latin America, territorial inequality, political data.
    JEL: D72 H77 P16 R50
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:gnt:wpaper:28
  17. By: Gerard Padró I Miquel; Nancy Qian
    Abstract: We develop a conceptual framework of political repression. To motivate why states repress, we introduce the notion of the political project. The proposed framework is used to interpret two known stylized facts: 1) repression is higher in autocracies; and 2) repression has declined since the 1990s. We discuss under-researched aspects of political repression such as migration restrictions, the targeting of repression, and backlash. We conclude by bringing attention to the two main challenges for research on repression: 1) conceptualizing whether a given episode of repression is successful, and 2) the inherent selection problem in empirical measures of repression.
    JEL: P0
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:34926
  18. By: Takuma Iwasaki; Eric A. Baldwin; John J. Donohue; Tai Markman
    Abstract: Organized interests are thought to influence policy, but whether and when interest group money overrides public opinion remains poorly understood. We investigate how gun interest group money and public opinion shape state gun laws. To test which force drives policy, we link 25 years of campaign finance records to a novel Gun Law Index paired with original estimates of constituent sentiment, 2000--2024. We show that pro-gun contributions produce deregulatory changes under Republican trifectas, while gun safety contributions generate regulatory tightening under Democratic trifectas. Using an instrumental variable design, we find that constituent sentiment does not causally predict policy change under Republican or Democratic trifectas. We document one of the most striking failures of democratic responsiveness in the history of the American Republic: while the twelve states in which universal background checks command at least 90% support have adopted them, only 8 other states have done so among the 36 states that have support between 80-90%, while assault weapons bans and concealed carry restrictions also enjoy durable majority support across 36 states, yet there has been far greater deregulation than regulation for both measures. These patterns provide unequivocal evidence that organized interests, rather than constituent preferences, drive gun policy in the United States.
    JEL: C21 C23 C36 D72 D78 H70 I18 K14 K16 P10
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:34970
  19. By: Kikuta, Kyosuke (Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization); Kurosawa, Hiroki
    Abstract: Survey research has long been a cornerstone of comparative politics, yet little quantitative evidence exists regarding its aggregate political effects in developing countries. We address this gap by arguing that respondents may misperceive academic survey interviews as state surveillance, deterring them from protesting. Leveraging the random assignment of Afrobarometer interviews, the plausibly exogenous assignment of “official-like” interviewers, and a difference-in-differences design, we show that survey interviews have sizable effects on protest in Africa. When no respondent perceived the survey as government-sponsored, interviews increased the likelihood of protests by 538% relative to the pre-treatment average (an encouragement effect). In contrast, when all respondents perceived government sponsorship, survey interviews reduced the likelihood of protests by 458% relative to the pre-treatment average (a deterrence effect). These effects are primarily driven by surveys conducted in non-liberal democracies, whereas they are different or even opposite in other political regimes. Extensive robustness and mechanism checks provide further support. These findings imply unintended externalities of survey research on real-world politics.
    Date: 2026–03–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:xvk6n_v2

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