2017
DOI: 10.1111/1475-6765.12221
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Trying not to lose: The electoral consequences of unilateral reform efforts and the social pact formation process

Abstract: Abstract. The existing social pact literature claims that governing parties offer social pact proposals because they anticipate they will receive an electoral benefit from social pact agreements. Yet the available data on social pacts inform us that in a substantial minority of cases social pact proposals fail to become social pact agreements. In an effort to better determine the political calculations made by governments before they propose a social pact, this article examines the effect of implementing refor… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 67 publications
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“…Evidence regarding other macro-level factors' influence on voting behavior remains scarce, especially in a broader perspective of economic, social and environmental concerns. Recently, more and more scholars are beginning to look at other factors than economic ones, i.e., wars [13], natural disasters and subsequent beneficial policies [14], social pacts and legislative reform [15,16], income inequality [17], subjective well-being [18]. What is still missing, however, is a study that systematically examines the economic, social and environmental performance of countries over time, and investigates how this performance affects the chances of a government to get re-elected.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evidence regarding other macro-level factors' influence on voting behavior remains scarce, especially in a broader perspective of economic, social and environmental concerns. Recently, more and more scholars are beginning to look at other factors than economic ones, i.e., wars [13], natural disasters and subsequent beneficial policies [14], social pacts and legislative reform [15,16], income inequality [17], subjective well-being [18]. What is still missing, however, is a study that systematically examines the economic, social and environmental performance of countries over time, and investigates how this performance affects the chances of a government to get re-elected.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%