Government Spending and Re-election: Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Brazilian Municipalities

  • Authors: Stephan Litschig.
  • BSE Working Paper: 515 | September 15
  • Keywords: voting , government spending , regression discontinuity
  • JEL codes: H40, H72, D72
  • voting
  • government spending
  • regression discontinuity
Download PDF Download pdf Icon

Abstract

Does additional government spending improve the electoral chances of incumbent political parties? This paper provides the first quasi-experimental evidence on this question. Our research design exploits discontinuities in federal funding to local governments in Brazil around several population cutoffs over the period 1982-1985. We show that extra fiscal transfers resulted in a 20% increase in local government spending per capita, and an increase of about 10 percentage points in the re-election probability of local incumbent parties. In the context of an agency model of electoral accountability, as well as existing results indicating that the revenue jumps studied here had positive impacts on education outcomes and earnings, these results suggest that expected electoral rewards encouraged incumbents to spend additional funds in ways that were valued by voters.

Subscribe to our newsletter
Want to receive the latest news and updates from the BSE? Share your details below.
Founding Institutions
Distinctions
Logo BSE
© Barcelona Graduate School of
Economics. All rights reserved.
FacebookInstagramLinkedinXYoutube