Do Religious Politicians Take Risks Differently? Evidence From Pakistan

Author:

Yadav Vineeta1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Political Science Penn State University

Abstract

AbstractGiven popular religiosity, the presence of religious parties, and the politicization of religious issues, it is highly likely that politicians with varying levels of personal religiosity are active in politics. Yet, our knowledge of how politicians’ religiosity influences their political choices is still limited, particularly for developing countries. In this paper, I use data from a survey experiment fielded to Pakistani politicians in 2018 to study whether and how politicians’ personal religiosity influences their political risk preferences. Scholars debate whether religiosity is correlated with higher or lower risk aversion among citizens; however, no study has examined this relationship among politicians. I find that higher religiosity systematically predicts which politicians are more risk‐averse and highly religious politicians’ decisions under uncertainty are inconsistent with expected utility maximization and prospect theory. These findings suggest that in contrast to existing assumptions of elite decision‐making, politicians’ religiosity systematically influences their risk preferences and choices.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Religious studies

Reference94 articles.

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2. THE MULTIDIMENSIONAL EFFECTS OF RELIGION ON SOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A REVIEW OF THE EMPIRICAL LITERATURE

3. Religion and electoral politics in Punjab;Bashir Usman;South Asian Studies,2019

4. Becker SaschaandLudgerWoessmann.2010.The effect of Protestantism on education before the industrialization. CESifo Paper # 2910. Accessed July 15 2022. Available at:https://econpapers.repec.org/paper/cesceswps/_5f2910.htm.

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