Democracy’s Achilles Heel or, How to Win an Election without Really Trying.

In this paper we investigate the efficacy of illicit electoral tactics and the characteristics which make a society prone to such tactics. We first investigate the chances of an incumbent head of government winning an election. We find that in those elections in which illicit tactics were prevalent...

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Bibliografische gegevens
Hoofdauteurs: Collier, P, Hoeffler, A
Formaat: Working paper
Taal:English
Gepubliceerd in: CSAE (University of Oxford) 2009
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author Collier, P
Hoeffler, A
author_facet Collier, P
Hoeffler, A
author_sort Collier, P
collection OXFORD
description In this paper we investigate the efficacy of illicit electoral tactics and the characteristics which make a society prone to such tactics. We first investigate the chances of an incumbent head of government winning an election. We find that in those elections in which illicit tactics were prevalent the chances of incumbent victory increase substantially, more than doubling the expected duration in office. Further, illicit tactics sharply reduce the importance of good economic performance for survival in office. We then investigate what makes a society prone to illicit electoral tactics. Both structural conditions and institutions matter. Societies that are small, low-income, and resource-rich have little chance of a clean election unless these conditions are offset by checks and balances such as veto points and a free press. Aid has offsetting effects, the net effect being modest. We show that these results are robust to different measures of the conduct of elections and to fixed effects. Finally, we revisit the Jones-Olken result that individual leaders matter for economic performance and find that it holds only where leaders are not disciplined by well-conducted elections.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7f6f1c0b-3fd4-4a06-b1f7-bc5a120b8ff42022-03-26T21:16:55ZDemocracy’s Achilles Heel or, How to Win an Election without Really Trying.Working paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:7f6f1c0b-3fd4-4a06-b1f7-bc5a120b8ff4EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsCSAE (University of Oxford)2009Collier, PHoeffler, AIn this paper we investigate the efficacy of illicit electoral tactics and the characteristics which make a society prone to such tactics. We first investigate the chances of an incumbent head of government winning an election. We find that in those elections in which illicit tactics were prevalent the chances of incumbent victory increase substantially, more than doubling the expected duration in office. Further, illicit tactics sharply reduce the importance of good economic performance for survival in office. We then investigate what makes a society prone to illicit electoral tactics. Both structural conditions and institutions matter. Societies that are small, low-income, and resource-rich have little chance of a clean election unless these conditions are offset by checks and balances such as veto points and a free press. Aid has offsetting effects, the net effect being modest. We show that these results are robust to different measures of the conduct of elections and to fixed effects. Finally, we revisit the Jones-Olken result that individual leaders matter for economic performance and find that it holds only where leaders are not disciplined by well-conducted elections.
spellingShingle Collier, P
Hoeffler, A
Democracy’s Achilles Heel or, How to Win an Election without Really Trying.
title Democracy’s Achilles Heel or, How to Win an Election without Really Trying.
title_full Democracy’s Achilles Heel or, How to Win an Election without Really Trying.
title_fullStr Democracy’s Achilles Heel or, How to Win an Election without Really Trying.
title_full_unstemmed Democracy’s Achilles Heel or, How to Win an Election without Really Trying.
title_short Democracy’s Achilles Heel or, How to Win an Election without Really Trying.
title_sort democracy s achilles heel or how to win an election without really trying
work_keys_str_mv AT collierp democracysachillesheelorhowtowinanelectionwithoutreallytrying
AT hoefflera democracysachillesheelorhowtowinanelectionwithoutreallytrying