Economists and electorates: The subjective economy of governing party support in Canada
- 1 March 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Political Research
- Vol. 29 (2) , 191-214
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6765.1996.tb00648.x
Abstract
This paper uses newly available Canadian data to address long‐standing debates on the rationality of the political economy of party support. We find that the subjective economic variable driving governing party support is sociotropic, not egocentric, and,pacerecent American and British studies, prospections do not dominate retrospections. Rather, models using national economic evaluations encompass rivals employing national expectations, personal expectations and perceived trends in personal expectations. Egocentric considerations are not irrelevant; rather, their effects on party support are indirect. We argue that these findings are consistent with an image of voters whose party‐support decisions are governed by a ‘rough‐and‐ready’ rationality appropriate to the information available to them and the politico‐economic systems of contemporary Western democracies.This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- The VP-function: A survey of the literature on vote and popularity functions after 25 yearsPublic Choice, 1994
- Explaining Election Outcomes in Canada: Economy and PoliticsCanadian Journal Of Political Science-Revue Canadienne De Science Politique, 1993
- Evaluations and Evolution: Public Attitudes toward Canada's Federal Political Parties, 1965–1991Canadian Journal Of Political Science-Revue Canadienne De Science Politique, 1993
- Response: Response to Aldrich's "Rational Choice and Turnout": Rationality and Political ParticipationAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1993
- Support for the Canadian Federal Progressive Conservative Party since 1988: The Impact of Economic Evaluations and Economic IssuesCanadian Journal Of Political Science-Revue Canadienne De Science Politique, 1992
- The Rationality of Economic Voting and the Macroeconomic RegimeAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1991
- Economic Conditions and the Popularity of the Incumbent Party in CanadaCanadian Journal Of Political Science-Revue Canadienne De Science Politique, 1990
- Voter Sensitivity to Economic Conditions: A Canadian-American ComparisonComparative Politics, 1986
- The Economy and Political Support: The Canadian CaseThe Journal of Politics, 1986
- Investigating Causal Relations by Econometric Models and Cross-spectral MethodsEconometrica, 1969