2018
DOI: 10.1007/s11558-018-9305-8
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Opening hours of polling stations and voter turnout: Evidence from a natural experiment

Abstract: Voter turnout has declined in many industrialized countries, raising the question of whether electoral institutions increase voter turnout. We exploit an electoral reform in the Austrian state of Burgenland as a natural experiment to identify the causal effect of opening hours of polling stations on voter turnout. The results show that a 10 percent increase in opening hours increased voter turnout by some 0.5 to 0.9 percentage points. The effect is substantial because voter turnout was already around 80 percen… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
(67 reference statements)
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“…Once compulsory voting was abolished, however, voter turnout returned to the pre-compulsory voting level and had no longrun effects. This finding is well in line with the results by Bechtel et al (2018) on compulsory voting for Switzerland and Potrafke and Roesel (2020), showing only temporary effects of longer opening hours of polling stations in Austria. However, we also use EVS microdata evidence on political values and actions to investigate the mechanisms behind our results.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 92%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Once compulsory voting was abolished, however, voter turnout returned to the pre-compulsory voting level and had no longrun effects. This finding is well in line with the results by Bechtel et al (2018) on compulsory voting for Switzerland and Potrafke and Roesel (2020), showing only temporary effects of longer opening hours of polling stations in Austria. However, we also use EVS microdata evidence on political values and actions to investigate the mechanisms behind our results.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Bechtel et al (2018) investigate compulsory voting in federal referendums in the Swiss canton of Vaud between 1900 and 1970 and find some small spillover effects into turnout in other elections but limited persistence. Potrafke and Roesel (2020) show that longer opening hours of polling stations increased voter turnout but did not influence subsequent elections when longer opening hours were not in place. Only the results obtained by Shineman (2012) indicate some long-term effects of compulsory voting on political interest.…”
Section: Related Studiesmentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…7 On voter turnout and electoral institutions in the Austrian states. see, for example, Gaebler et al (2017) and Potrafke and Roesel (2018).…”
Section: Identification Strategymentioning
confidence: 96%