All (economic) politics is local: Voting responses to localized price shocks during the great recession

IF 3.2 3区 经济学 Q1 ECONOMICS
Ron Cheung, Rachel Meltzer
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Abstract

The connection between individual and macroeconomic conditions and voting behavior is well-established. We contribute to the less resolved “spatial gap” in the literature that centers on how the localized economic conditions of where voters live influence their likelihood to vote. We test how space mediates the tension between voter mobilization and withdrawal in the face of economic shocks. We consider a scenario, the Great Recession, where economic shocks were quite localized and sudden, and compile an extensive dataset of all registered voters in the four-county Tampa metropolitan area between 2006 and 2015. Using sales prices and property characteristics from the tax assessor rolls, we estimate a neighborhood-level shock to housing values induced by the Great Recession. Results show that when we do not account for local neighborhood variation, the Great Recession is associated with a significant decrease in voter turnout. However, when we account for localized economic shocks, we find that residents in neighborhoods with negative price shocks were more likely to vote after the Recession, especially in non-local elections. In addition, the propensity to vote increases with the size of the negative price shock. There is some evidence that variation at the neighborhood level matters more than voter-level heterogeneity. The positive voting response is most profound in predominantly Black neighborhoods, and, to a lesser extent, in predominantly Hispanic and the lowest income neighborhoods. Increases in the propensity to vote are robust to models controlling for baseline economic vulnerabilities, such as localized unemployment, the weakness of the local housing market and exposure to sectors hit hardest by the Recession. The results indicate that dramatic and sudden changes in localized economic conditions can drive voting behavior, and in ways that are distinct from macroeconomic drivers. In addition, the housing asset channel appears to be a powerful one, which can induce significant voting responses at the national level apart from other localized economic drivers, especially among homeowners.

所有(经济)政治都是地方性的:在大衰退期间,投票是对地方性价格冲击的回应
个人和宏观经济条件与投票行为之间的联系已经确立。我们促成了文献中较少解决的“空间差距”,这些文献集中在选民居住的地方的局部经济条件如何影响他们投票的可能性。我们测试空间如何在面对经济冲击时调解选民动员和退出之间的紧张关系。我们考虑了一种情景,即大衰退,其中经济冲击是非常局部和突然的,并编制了一个广泛的数据集,涵盖了2006年至2015年间坦帕大都市区四个县的所有登记选民。利用来自税务评估员名册的销售价格和房地产特征,我们估计了大衰退对住房价值造成的社区层面的冲击。结果表明,当我们不考虑当地社区的差异时,大衰退与选民投票率的显著下降有关。然而,当我们考虑到局部经济冲击时,我们发现,在经济衰退后,受到负价格冲击的社区的居民更有可能投票,尤其是在非地方选举中。此外,投票倾向随着负面价格冲击的规模而增加。有证据表明,社区层面的差异比选民层面的异质性更重要。在以黑人为主的社区,积极的投票反应最为深刻,在以西班牙裔和最低收入为主的社区,这种反应程度较低。投票倾向的增加对于控制基准经济脆弱性的模型来说是稳健的,比如局部失业、当地房地产市场的疲软以及受经济衰退打击最严重的行业的风险敞口。结果表明,当地经济状况的急剧和突然变化可以以不同于宏观经济驱动因素的方式驱动投票行为。此外,住房资产渠道似乎是一个强大的渠道,除了其他局部经济驱动因素外,它可以在国家层面上引起重大的投票反应,特别是在房主中。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Journal of Regional Science (JRS) publishes original analytical research at the intersection of economics and quantitative geography. Since 1958, the JRS has published leading contributions to urban and regional thought including rigorous methodological contributions and seminal theoretical pieces. The JRS is one of the most highly cited journals in urban and regional research, planning, geography, and the environment. The JRS publishes work that advances our understanding of the geographic dimensions of urban and regional economies, human settlements, and policies related to cities and regions.
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