Priors Rule: When Do Malfeasance Revelations Help Or Hurt Incumbent Parties?

Author:

Arias Eric1,Larreguy Horacio2,Marshall John3,Querubín Pablo4

Affiliation:

1. Independent Researcher

2. ITAM , Mexico

3. Columbia University , USA

4. New York University , USA

Abstract

Abstract Effective policy-making requires that voters avoid electing malfeasant politicians. However, informing voters of incumbent malfeasance in corrupt contexts may not reduce incumbent support. As our simple learning model shows, electoral sanctioning is limited where voters already believed incumbents to be malfeasant, while information’s effect on turnout is non-monotonic in the magnitude of reported malfeasance. We conducted a field experiment in Mexico that informed voters about malfeasant mayoral spending before municipal elections, to test whether these Bayesian predictions apply in a developing context where many voters are poorly informed. Consistent with voter learning, the intervention increased incumbent vote share where voters possessed unfavorable prior beliefs and when audit reports caused voters to favorably update their posterior beliefs about the incumbent’s malfeasance. Furthermore, we find that low and, especially, high malfeasance revelations increased turnout, while less surprising information reduced turnout. These results suggest that improved governance requires greater transparency and citizen expectations.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance

Reference41 articles.

1. “When Does Information Influence Voters? The Joint Importance of Salience and Coordination.”;Adida;Comparative Political Studies,2020

2. “Information Provision, Voter Coordination, and Electoral Accountability: Evidence from Mexican Social Networks.”;Arias;American Political Science Review,2019

3. “Does the Content and Mode of Delivery of Information Matter for Electoral Accountability? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Mexico.”;Arias,2018

4. “Informe del Resultado de la Fiscalización Superior de la Cuenta Pública 2012.”;Auditoría Superior de la Federación,2014

5. “Do Government Audits Reduce Corruption? Estimating the Impacts of Exposing Corrupt Politicians.”;Avis;Journal of Political Economy,2018

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