000 01524pab a2200181 454500
008 180718b2007 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aLadner, Matthew
245 _aPartisan preferences, electoral prospects, and economic expectations
260 _c2007
300 _ap.571-96.
362 _aMay
520 _aResearch shows that economic expectations reflect partisan preferences. Those who support the current government tend to think the future will go well, at least by comparison with those who oppose the government. But, there always is uncertainly surrounding the political future, especially in the period before elections. this article considers whether the uncertainty matters. Specifically, it examines whether people's economic expectations are conditional on their own estimates of who will win. The analysis relies on data from five election study panels in the United States and the United Kingdom, both majoritarian systems, where the effects of partisan winning and losing are most likely. The results imply thatpeople in these countries do anticipate election outcomes; that is, economic expectations prior to elections reflect both the political present and future. this tells us not only that expectations in these systems are substantially rational but that politics plays a much bigger role in our economic thinking than originally thought. - Reproduced.
650 _aElections
700 _aWlezien, Christopher
773 _aComparative Political Studies
908 _aN
909 _a74733
999 _c74733
_d74733