158 research outputs found
Left-wing parties in Western Europe gain votes when unemployment rises, but only when they are in opposition.
How does a rise in unemployment affect support for left-wing parties? As Ruth Dassonneville and Michael S. Lewis-Beck write, left-wing parties might be expected to gain support during periods of rising unemployment as they effectively âownâ the issue in the eyes of the electorate. However, this effect may be complicated when left-wing parties are in government, as incumbent parties tend to be blamed for a struggling economy. Outlining the results of a study on West European elections, they find that left-wing parties do seem to benefit from a rise in unemployment, but this effect decreases significantly depending on the extent to which they are involved in government
Macroeconomics, economic crisis and electoral outcomes: A national European pool
An abundance of comparative survey research argues the presence of economic voting as an individual force in European elections, thereby refuting a possible ecological fallacy. But the hypothesis of economic voting at the aggregate level, with macroeconomics influencing overall electoral outcomes, seems less sure. Indeed, there might be a micrological fallacy at work, with the supposed individual economic vote effect not adding up to a national electoral effect after all. Certainly that would account for the spotty evidence linking macroeconomics and national election outcomes. We examine the possibility of a micrological fallacy through rigorous analysis of a large time-series cross-sectional dataset of European nations. From these results, it becomes clear that the macroeconomy strongly moves national election outcomes, with hard times punishing governing parties, and good times rewarding them. Further, this economy-election connection appears asymmetric, altering under economic crisis. Indeed, we show that economic crisis, defined as negative growth, has much greater electoral effects than positive economic growth. Hard times clearly make governments more accountable to their electorates
Economic Policy Voting and Incumbency: Unemployment in Western Europe
The economic voting literature has been dominated by the incumbency-oriented hypothesis, where voters reward or punish government at the ballot box according to economic performance. The alternative, policy-oriented hypothesis, where voters favor parties closest to their issue position, has been neglected in this literature. We explore policy voting with respect to an archetypal economic policy issue â unemployment. Voters who favor lower unemployment should tend to vote for left parties, since they âownâ the issue. Examining a large time-series cross-sectional (TSCS) pool of Western European nations, we find some evidence for economic policy voting. However, it exists in a form conditioned by incumbency. According to varied tests, left incumbents actually experience a net electoral cost, if the unemployment rate climbs under their regime. Incumbency, then, serves to break any natural economic policy advantage that might accrue to the left due to the unemployment issue
Growth, Inequality, and Party Support: Valence and Positional Economic Voting
Economic growth helps governments get reelected. But does growth, as a valence issue, exhaust the possibilities for the economic vote? What about the impact of inequality, as as a positional economic issue? Can rising economic inequality make or break a government, independent of the countryâs growth trajectory? We show, via an examination of 310 elections in established democracies, across time and space, that growth and inequality both matter for incumbent government support. Somewhat surprisingly, we find that both left-wing and right-wing incumbents are held accountable for changes in inequality. While these effects appear unaltered by structural factors such as federalism or the electoral system, their impact seems to depend, to some extent, on whether the country is going through economic hard times
The economic voter and economic crisis
Theories of economic voting have a long tradition in political science and continue to inspire a large group of scholars. Classical economic voting theory assumes a reward-and-punishment mechanism (Key, 1966). This mechanism implies that incumbents are more likely to stay in power under a good economy, but are cast out under a bad economy (Lewis-Beck and Stegmaier, 2000). The economy has repeatedly been shown to be a major determinant of electoral behavior (see especially the recent book by Duch and Stevenson, 2008), but the current economic crisis seems to provide a marked illustration of how the economy affects voting. In recent elections across the Western industrialized world, most ruling coalitions lost their majority. Opposition parties, on the other hand, whether right wing or left wing, have appeared to benefit from the economic downturn
Punishing Local Incumbents for the Local Economy
After decennia of research on economic voting, it is now established that the state of the economy affects voting behaviour. Nevertheless, this conclusion is the result of a focus on predominantly national-level economies and national-level elections. In this paper, we show that at a local level as well, mechanisms of accountability linked to the economy are at work. The local economic context affected voting behaviour in the 2012 Belgian municipal elections, with a stronger increase of unemployment rates in their municipality significantly decreasing the probability that voters choose an incumbent party. Additionally, we observe that voters are not opportunistically voting for incumbents who lower tax rates. Instead, voters seem to be holding local incumbents accountable for local economic conditions. We hence conclude that voters care about economic outcomes, not about what specific policies are implemented to reach these outcomes
The abiding voter : the lengthy horizon of retrospective evaluations
Although the theory of retrospective voting receives wide support in the literature on voting
behavior, less agreement exists on votersâ time horizon when assessing the governmentâs
performance â i.e., whether voters are myopic. Previous studies on voter myopia tend to focus
on aggregate-level measures of the economy, or use an experimental approach. Using panel
data, this paper offers the first investigation into voter myopia that uses individual-level
evaluations of government performance in a representative survey at several points during the
electoral cycle. Our study focuses on The Netherlands, but we also provide tests of the
generalizability and robustness of our findings, and a replication in the U.S. context. The results
indicate that voter satisfaction early in the governmentâs term adds to explaining incumbent
voting. Thus, rather than the myopic voter, we find evidence of the abiding voter â steady at
her or his post, evaluating government performance over a long length of time
Fast high fidelity quantum non-demolition qubit readout via a non-perturbative cross-Kerr coupling
Qubit readout is an indispensable element of any quantum information
processor. In this work, we experimentally demonstrate a non-perturbative
cross-Kerr coupling between a transmon and a polariton mode which enables an
improved quantum non-demolition (QND) readout for superconducting qubits. The
new mechanism uses the same experimental techniques as the standard QND qubit
readout in the dispersive approximation, but due to its non-perturbative
nature, it maximizes the speed, the single-shot fidelity and the QND properties
of the readout. In addition, it minimizes the effect of unwanted decay channels
such as the Purcell effect. We observed a single-shot readout fidelity of 97.4%
for short 50 ns pulses, and we quantified a QND-ness of 99% for long
measurement pulses with repeated single-shot readouts
Synthesis, analysis and biological evaluation of novel indolquinonecryptolepine analogues as potential anti-tumour agents.
A small library of cryptolepine analogues were synthesised incorporating halogens and/or nitrogen containing side chains to optimise their interaction with the sugar-phosphate backbone of DNA to give improved binding, interfering with topoisomerase II hence enhancing cytotoxicity. Cell viability, DNA binding and Topoisomerase II inhibition is discussed for these compounds. Fluorescence microscopy was used to investigate the uptake of the synthesised cryptolepines into the nucleus. We report the synthesis and anti-cancer biological evaluation of nine novel cryptolepine analogues, which have greater cytotoxicity than the parent compound and are important lead compounds in the development of novel potent and selective indoloquinone anti-neoplastic agents
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