1998
DOI: 10.2307/2586302
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Fiscal Policy Outcomes and Electoral Accountability in American States

Abstract: We examine whether and when voters in American states hold elected officials accountable for the results of fiscal policy decisions. Clear fiscal policy effects appear in both gubernatorial and legislative elections between 1968 and 1992, independent of the effects of incumbency, coattails, term limits, and macroeconomic conditions. The results show that voters expect Democrats to provide higher levels of taxes and spending relative to state economies. Net of these expectations, Republican gubernatorial candid… Show more

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Cited by 224 publications
(185 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…This means that voters hold parties more responsible for their most salient goals, punishing the right more severely for tax increases. Lowry et al (1998) show that this is indeed the behaviour of voters in US gubernatorial elections, where Republicans are penalised more severely for tax increases than Democrats 15 . Ideological differences between left and right-wing parties are more marked in Europe and Spain than in the US, even at a local level.We therefore expect that left-wing local governments will be punished less for the municipality's tax increases than right-wing governments.…”
Section: Basicmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…This means that voters hold parties more responsible for their most salient goals, punishing the right more severely for tax increases. Lowry et al (1998) show that this is indeed the behaviour of voters in US gubernatorial elections, where Republicans are penalised more severely for tax increases than Democrats 15 . Ideological differences between left and right-wing parties are more marked in Europe and Spain than in the US, even at a local level.We therefore expect that left-wing local governments will be punished less for the municipality's tax increases than right-wing governments.…”
Section: Basicmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Most of the previous literature on the political costs of taxation comes from the U.S. 7 . Because the U.S. is a two-party system, the authors are able to use the vote share of one of the parties as a dependent variable, giving different responses to each of the explanatory variables if the party is the incumbent or the challenger (see, e.g., Peltzman, 1992, Lowry et al, 1998. This procedure will be difficult to apply in our case, given the high number of parties and the fact that in practice a party may play more than two roles 8 .…”
Section: The Vote Equationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In particular, when exploring policy changes, situations with divided government would seem to exclude any partisan influences while unified governments would be more able to shift government spending, tax policy and institutional characteristics in ideological directions. Of the comparatively few studies to explore this situation, Alt and Lowry (1994) find that states with divided government respond differently to economic shocks than those with unified government (see also Lowry et al 1998, Alt et al 2002.…”
Section: Democrat Dominated Legislatures Aim To Increase the Size Andmentioning
confidence: 99%