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Economic Determinants of Electoral Outcomes
Annual Review of Political Science (2000)
  • Michael S Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa
  • Mary Stegmaier, University of Virginia
Abstract
Economic conditions shape election outcomes in the world's democracies. Good times keep parties in office, bad times cast them out. This proposition is robust, as the voluminous body of research reviewed here demonstrates. The strong findings at the macro level are founded on the economic voter, who holds the government responsible for economic performance, rewarding or punishing it at the ballot box. Although voters do not look exclusively at economic issues, they generally weigh those more heavily than any others, regardless of the democracy they vote in.
Disciplines
Publication Date
June, 2000
Citation Information
Michael S Lewis-Beck and Mary Stegmaier. "Economic Determinants of Electoral Outcomes" Annual Review of Political Science Vol. 3 (2000)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/michael_lewis_beck/73/