NUI Maynooth

NUI Maynooth ePrints and eTheses Archive

NUIM Library

Incumbent-Quality Advantage and Counterfactual Electoral Stagnation in the U.S. Senate

Pastine, Ivan and Pastine, Tuvana and Redmond, Paul (2012) Incumbent-Quality Advantage and Counterfactual Electoral Stagnation in the U.S. Senate. National University of Ireland Maynooth.

[img]PDF - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
140Kb

Abstract

This paper presents a simple statistical exercise to provide a benchmark for the degree of electoral stagnation without direct officeholder benefits or challenger scare-off effects. Here electoral stagnation arises solely due to incumbent-quality advantage where the higher quality candidate wins the election. The simulation is calibrated using the observed drop-out rates in the U.S. Senate. From 1946 to 2010, the observed incumbent reelection rate is 81.7 percent; the benchmark with incumbent-quality advantage alone is able to generate a reelection rate of 78.2 percent. In the sub-sample from 1946 to 1978, the reelection rate from the simulation is almost identical to the observed. The rates diverge in the second part of the sub-sample from 1980 to 2010, possibly indicating an increase in electoral stagnation due to incumbency advantage arising for reasons other than incumbent-quality advantage.

Keywords:Incumbent-Quality Advantage; Counterfactual Electoral Stagnation; U.S. Senate;
Subjects:Social Sciences > Economics
ID Code:3638
Deposited By:Tuvana Pastine
Deposited On:08 May 2012 09:46
Publisher:National University of Ireland Maynooth

Repository Staff Only: item control page