Economic growth, largest-party vote shares, and electoral authoritarianism

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE Electoral Studies Pub Date : 2024-10-31 DOI:10.1016/j.electstud.2024.102879
Matthew Wilson , David Andersen
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Abstract

Cross-national research on electoral authoritarianism has a limited understanding of the role of economic growth in bolstering ruling parties due to its focus on hegemonic or dominant-party regimes, which bases conclusions on ruling party success and eschews comparisons with other regimes. This paper demonstrates the importance of growth-induced election gains in electoral authoritarian regimes by comparing the impacts of growth on largest-party vote shares across all regimes. Examining legislative and executive elections for a sample of roughly 130 countries between 1945 and 2020, we show that growth consistently increases largest-party vote shares and that this relationship is stronger in less democratic regimes. The results highlight economic performance as an important channel through which parties in autocracies can legitimate their authority and consolidate control over future elections. We conclude by discussing several ways that growth supports increased electoral dominance by a ruling party.
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经济增长、最大党派得票率和选举威权主义
有关选举威权主义的跨国研究对经济增长在支持执政党方面所起作用的理解有限,这是因为这些研究的重点是霸权或主导政党政权,其结论以执政党的成功为基础,而回避了与其他政权的比较。本文通过比较经济增长对所有政权中最大党派得票率的影响,证明了经济增长引发的选举收益在选举专制政权中的重要性。通过对 1945 年至 2020 年间约 130 个国家的立法和行政选举进行研究,我们发现经济增长会持续增加最大党派的得票率,而且这种关系在民主程度较低的政权中更为明显。这些结果突出表明,经济表现是专制政体中的政党使其权威合法化并巩固对未来选举控制的重要渠道。最后,我们讨论了经济增长支持执政党提高选举主导地位的几种方式。
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来源期刊
Electoral Studies
Electoral Studies POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
13.00%
发文量
82
审稿时长
67 days
期刊介绍: Electoral Studies is an international journal covering all aspects of voting, the central act in the democratic process. Political scientists, economists, sociologists, game theorists, geographers, contemporary historians and lawyers have common, and overlapping, interests in what causes voters to act as they do, and the consequences. Electoral Studies provides a forum for these diverse approaches. It publishes fully refereed papers, both theoretical and empirical, on such topics as relationships between votes and seats, and between election outcomes and politicians reactions; historical, sociological, or geographical correlates of voting behaviour; rational choice analysis of political acts, and critiques of such analyses.
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