This book estimates the effects of economic conditions on the behaviour of individual voters and on the outcomes of 42 elections in 15 countries. The conventional wisdom that poor economic conditions hurt governing parties is too simplistic and it does not hold for junior parties in coalition governments.
This book estimates the effects of economic conditions on the behaviour of individual voters and on the outcomes of 42 elections in 15 countries. The conventional wisdom that poor economic conditions hurt governing parties is too simplistic and it does not hold for junior parties in coalition governments.
Wouter van der Brug is associate professor in methods for the social sciences at the Amsterdam School for Communications Research, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands. His work has been published in Comparative Political Studies, the British Journal of Political Science, the European Journal of Political Research, Electoral Studies, Party Politics, the Journal of Theoretical Politics, West European Politics, and Acta Politica. He recently co-authored European Elections and Domestic Politics (with Cees van der Eijk, 2007).
Inhaltsangabe
1. Studying economic voting 2. Party choice as a two-stage process 3. Hypotheses and data: the theoretical and empirical setting 4. Effects of the economy on party support 5. The economic voter 6. From individual preferences to election outcomes 7. The economy, party competition, and the vote.
1. Studying economic voting 2. Party choice as a two-stage process 3. Hypotheses and data: the theoretical and empirical setting 4. Effects of the economy on party support 5. The economic voter 6. From individual preferences to election outcomes 7. The economy, party competition, and the vote.
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