Mayors’ Reelection Choice and the Economy: Evidence from
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Transcript Mayors’ Reelection Choice and the Economy: Evidence from
Mayors’ Reelection Choice
and the Economy: Evidence
from Portugal
Vítor Castro and Rodrigo Martins
University of Coimbra, NIPE and GEMF, Portugal
EPCS 2011 Meeting
28th April – 1st May
Motivation
Lack of an analysis on the determinants of
Mayors’ decision of running for another term
in office: Economic? Political? Individual?
Fill that gap in the literature.
Empirical analysis for Portugal.
Portuguese local elections: 1979-2005.
Extensive data set: mainland municipalities.
2
Motivation
The Portuguese case => excellent laboratory:
1) election dates are defined exogenously from the
perspective of local authorities;
2) all municipalities have elections on the same day;
3) there are no legal limits on the number of terms in
office during the time span considered in this study;
4) local incumbents have a key influence in local
policy and outcomes.
3
Literature
Explores the influence of economic and
political conditions on the electoral results and
on politicians’ popularity [survey: Paldam(2004)]
and how voters judge democratic governments.
Explores the dynamics of political ambition
and politicians’ career management,
mainly focused on the United States: running
for congress (Black, 1972; Fox and Lawless, 2005).
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Literature
Decision of running: number of available seats,
term limit requirements, party support, age, the
prospect of a better position,…
Potential candidates are more likely to seek office
when political conditions are more favourable
(Schlesinger, 1966).
Personality effects are relevant in explaining vote
and popularity => different candidates provide
different electoral outcomes (Frey & Schneider, 1978;
Lanoue & Headrick, 1994).
5
Literature
Politicians try to maximize their chances of winning
elections => the perception of the electoral success
affects their strategies (Nordhaus, 1975; Hibbs, 1977).
Studies for the U.S. conclude that when the electoral
support decreases, the probability of seeking
reelection falls (Moore & Hibbing, 1998; Theriault, 1998).
Popularity erosion or costs of ruling: the number of
consecutive terms in office may reduce the chances
of reelection (Mueller, 1970; Veiga & Veiga, 2004, 2010).
6
Literature
The economy is another important dimension that
affects incumbent’s electoral fortune.
For Portugal, Veiga & Veiga (2004, 2010) find
evidence of a reward/punishment mechanism
related to the economic performance.
Good local economic performance should increase
Mayor’s general sense of efficacy as a candidate.
National and/or Local economic conditions? Both.
N: Remmer & Gélineau (2003); Belanger & Gélineau (2004).
L: Squire & Fastnow (1994); Atkeson & Partin (1995), Hansen (1999).
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Portuguese Municipal Elections
First municipal elections: December 1976.
In each municipality there is a Mayor, Town/City
Council (executive power) and a Municipal
Assembly (deliberative power).
The Mayor is the candidate that achieves the highest
number of votes (serves a 4-year term).
Mayor’s tasks: manage human resources, contracts,
licenses, projects and their timetable; territory organization,
social and economic development; supply local public goods
(water, transportation, housing, healthcare, education, culture). 8
Portuguese Municipal Elections
So, Mayors are responsible for the well-being of the
population that lives in the municipality => Mayors’
electoral fortune is tied to the economic environment.
Until the 2005 Municipal elections, there was no
legal limit on the number of the terms in office.
But a 3-term limit was established in 2005.
Thus, the period 1976-2005 represents an interesting
and unique case for studying the reasons why Mayors
run for another term in office.
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Data
278 mainland municipalities.
Period: 1979-2005 (8 electoral periods).
Dependent variable (Recand) = 1 when a
Mayor is running for another term in office.
Several economic, political, and individual
variables are used as regressors,
controlled for at 3 levels: National, Regional
(NUTS III level) and Local (Municipal level).
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Data – independent variables
National
UR
GDP
Inflation
Regional
Percentage change in the national unemployment rate+
UR
GDP_pc
Local
Percentage change in the regional (NUTS) unemployment rate+
PPI
Change in the Municipal Purchasing Power Index (in percentage)+
Wages
Change in Municipal real wages (in percentage)+
Employ
TotExpd
CapExpd
Change in Municipal employment (in percentage)+
Real GDP growth rate+
National inflation rate (percentage change in CPI)+
Real regional (NUTS) GDP per capita (thousands Euros)+
Real total expenditure per capita (Municipal – in thousands of Euros)
Real capital expenditure per capita (Municipal – in thousands of Euros)
Notes: + percentage change from the previous year and average percentage change over term.
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Data – independent variables
Control
LnPop
SGov
TLGov
MajGov
Age
Male
Degree
Residence
Logarithm of the population living in each Portuguese municipality
Dummy variable = 1 if the local and national governments are of the
same party; 0 otherwise
Time in local government, i.e. number of terms in office
Dummy variable = 1 if the Mayor’s party has a majority; 0 otherwise.
Age of the Mayor running for another term
Dummy variable = 1 if the Mayor is male; 0 otherwise
Dummy variable = 1 if the Mayor has a university degree; 0 otherwise
Dummy variable = 1 if the Mayor lives in the municipality where he or
she was elected; 0 otherwise
Sources: Main Economic Indicators (OECD); IMF International Financial Statistics (IMF); Portuguese
National Institute of Statistics (INE); Marktest; Finanças Municipais (Municipal Finances DGAL); Quadros de Pessoal (database of the Portuguese Ministry of Labour); Technical Staff
for Matters Concerning the Electoral Process (STAPE).
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Model
Probit model
estimated over a panel of municipalities and
elections.
Prob(recand 1 | x) (x' β)
y x it ' β it ,
i 1,...,n, t 1,...,Ti ,
*
it
recandit 1 if y 0, and 0 otherwise.
*
it
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Empirical Results
Table 1. Regressions with national and regional variables: Pooled probit (Average Marginal Effects)
Percentage changes from the previous year
National
Regional
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
UR
-0.0004
(-0.49)
GDP
0.0133
(1.15)
SGov
TLGov
MajGov
No. Obs.
0.0040
(1.11)
-0.0073
(-1.59)
0.0024
(0.49)
-0.0032**
(-2.56)
-0.0025**
(-2.03)
CapExpd
LnPop
0.0006
(0.66)
-0.0045
(-1.19)
GDP_pc
Inflation
Average percentage changes over term
National
Regional
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
-0.0109
(-1.27)
-0.0441**
(-2.50)
-0.0177***
(-3.69)
0.0888***
(4.77)
2,115
-0.0108
(-1.25)
-0.0429**
(-2.47)
-0.0179***
(-3.73)
0.0889***
(4.78)
2,115
0.0027
(0.55)
0.0005
(0.45)
0.0003***
(3.59)
0.0349**
(2.36)
-0.0474**
(-1.97)
-0.0255***
(-5.40)
0.0609**
(2.16)
1,103
0.0003***
(3.31)
0.0308**
(2.04)
-0.0450*
(-1.85)
-0.0257***
(-5.40)
0.0627**
(2.26)
1,103
-0.0088
(-1.05)
-0.0510***
(-2.75)
-0.0201***
(-4.48)
0.0862***
(4.41)
1,872
0.0001
(0.10)
-0.0089
(-1.06)
-0.0500***
(-2.71)
-0.0205***
(-4.57)
0.0854***
(4.39)
1,872
0.0003***
(3.36)
0.0256
(1.43)
-0.0438
(-1.60)
-0.0201***
(-3.81)
0.0329
(0.93)
828
0.0003***
(3.29)
0.0303**
(1.99)
-0.0449*
(-1.85)
-0.0257***
(-5.41)
0.0628**
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(2.27)
1,103
Empirical Results: National & Regional
National and regional economic environment are not
very relevant for the Mayors’ decision of seeking
reelection (except inflation => negative effect).
The likelihood of seeking reelection increases:
when capital expenditures increase (improve local
economy => sign of Mayor’s intention of re-running);
when Mayors have majority in the Council (support);
in municipalities with more population (visibility,
power, wages indexed to the number of voters).
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Empirical Results: National & Regional
The likelihood of seeking reelection decreases:
when a Mayor belongs to the party that leads the
national government:
offered a better position in the national gov.;
negative spillover effects from the national gov.;
for each additional term (popularity erosion or
costs of ruling reduce the chances of reelection).
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Table 2. Regressions with local variables: Pooled probit (Average Marginal Effects)
% changes from the previous year
PPI
Wages
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
0.0054***
(2.61)
0.0052***
(2.63)
-0.0029
(-0.84)
0.0054***
(2.68)
0.0097*
(1.90)
0.0092*
(1.85)
0.0132*
(1.69)
0.0091*
(1.72)
Employ
TotExpd
0.0003
(0.39)
0.0002***
(3.04)
CapExpd
LnPop
SGov
TLGov
MajGov
Age
Male
Degree
Residence
No. Obs.
Average % changes over term
(1)
0.0371*
(1.79)
-0.0395
(-1.44)
-0.0149***
(-2.68)
0.0399
(1.09)
-0.0073***
(-3.79)
-0.0992
(-1.21)
0.0241
(0.86)
-0.0164
(-0.333)
795
-0.0010
(-0.45)
0.0002***
(2.85)
0.0003***
(3.35)
0.0332*
(1.88)
-0.0437
(-1.58)
-0.0144***
(-2.61)
0.0323
(0.90)
-0.0074***
(-3.82)
-0.0969
(-1.20)
0.0251
(0.89)
-0.0129
(-0.26)
795
0.0003***
(3.28)
0.0314*
(1.76)
-0.0471*
(-1.69)
-0.0147***
(-2.63)
0.0355
(0.98)
-0.0067***
(-3.35)
-0.1007
(-1.23)
0.0272
(0.95)
-0.0197
(-0.39)
778
0.0407*
(1.82)
-0.0413
(-1.51)
-0.0143**
(-2.54)
0.0319
(0.87)
-0.0070***
(-3.61)
-0.1026
(-1.26)
0.0221
(0.79)
-0.0108
(-0.22)
792
0.0003***
(3.32)
0.0327*
(1.73)
-0.0466*
(-1.69)
-0.0146***
(-2.63)
0.0293
(0.80)
-0.0070***
(-3.63)
-0.1051
(-1.28)
0.0243
(0.88)
-0.0063
(-0.13)
792
0.0003***
(3.26)
0.0329*
(1.75)
-0.0498*
(-1.79)
-0.0145***
(-2.57)
0.0318
(0.85)
-0.0064***
(-3.22)
-0.1025
(-1.26)
0.0258
(0.91)
-0.0143
17
(-0.29)
775
Empirical Results: Local
Local economic conditions (purch. power; expend) are
more important for Mayor’s decision than national.
Improvements in municipal economy => increases the
chances of reelection => incentive for re-running.
Political variables: only the coeff on TLGov remains
significant and with the expected sign (less observations).
Individual characteristics: only the Age of the
candidate is relevant (older Mayors have a lower
propensity to run for another term).
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Conclusions
Local economic conditions matter more for Mayor’s
decision of re-running than national or regional ones.
Mayors try to influence local economic conditions
by increasing expenditures before elections to get
more electoral support in the next election.
Reelection choices are significantly related to the
expectations regarding the electoral results (in line
with traditional vote and popularity functions).
Mayors’ relevant economic time horizon is not
restricted to the recent past.
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The End
Comments are welcome!
Thank you!
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