This
paper attempts to estimate the effect of campaign advertising expenditures on
vote outcomes in Great Britain’s general election over 1992-2001. It uses an
empirical method to estimate the impact of electoral campaign expenditures on
votes, but also attempts to develop a signaling model in the election by estimating
the relationship between campaign spending and quality signaling through
incumbency status. Specifically, this
paper examines an empirical analysis of the impact of campaign expenditures on
votes cast in the general elections in Great Britain. It extends Lee [1] to
incorporate the incumbency and interactive effect. First, it includes candidate
and party incumbency status into the benchmark model so as to estimate
incumbency effects. Second, it includes an interaction term between candidate
incumbency and candidate spending to estimate interactive effects. The main
features of the estimation model are to assess the impact of campaign
expenditures on votes by estimating incumbency and interactive effects on
votes.
Author(s) Details
Sung-Kyu Lee
Department of International Trade, Andong National University, 1375 Gyeongdong-ro, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do, 36729, South Korea
View Book :- http://bp.bookpi.org/index.php/bpi/catalog/book/191
Author(s) Details
Sung-Kyu Lee
Department of International Trade, Andong National University, 1375 Gyeongdong-ro, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do, 36729, South Korea
View Book :- http://bp.bookpi.org/index.php/bpi/catalog/book/191
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