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Main Authors: Brandimarti, Eleonora, De Giorgi, Giacomo, Laurent-Lucchetti, Jeremy
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.06808
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author Brandimarti, Eleonora
De Giorgi, Giacomo
Laurent-Lucchetti, Jeremy
author_facet Brandimarti, Eleonora
De Giorgi, Giacomo
Laurent-Lucchetti, Jeremy
contents There is a tight connection between credit access and voting. We show that uncertainty in access to credit pushes voters toward more conservative candidates in US elections. Using a 1% sample of the US population with valid credit reports, we relate access to credit to voting outcomes in all county-by-congressional districts over the period 2004-2016. Specifically, we construct exogenous measures of uncertainty to credit access, i.e. credit score values around which individual total credit amount jumps the most (e.g. around which uncertainty on access to credit is the highest). We then show that a 10pp increase in the share of marginal voters located just around these thresholds increases republican votes by 2.7pp, and reduces that of democrats by 2.6pp. Furthermore, winning candidates in more uncertain constituencies tend to follow a more conservative rhetoric.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2407_06808
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Credit and Voting
Brandimarti, Eleonora
De Giorgi, Giacomo
Laurent-Lucchetti, Jeremy
General Economics
Economics
There is a tight connection between credit access and voting. We show that uncertainty in access to credit pushes voters toward more conservative candidates in US elections. Using a 1% sample of the US population with valid credit reports, we relate access to credit to voting outcomes in all county-by-congressional districts over the period 2004-2016. Specifically, we construct exogenous measures of uncertainty to credit access, i.e. credit score values around which individual total credit amount jumps the most (e.g. around which uncertainty on access to credit is the highest). We then show that a 10pp increase in the share of marginal voters located just around these thresholds increases republican votes by 2.7pp, and reduces that of democrats by 2.6pp. Furthermore, winning candidates in more uncertain constituencies tend to follow a more conservative rhetoric.
title Credit and Voting
topic General Economics
Economics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.06808