Businessman Candidates
Year:
2010Published in:
American Journal of Political ScienceWhy and when do businessmen run for public office rather than rely upon other means of influence? What are the implications of their participation for public policy? We show formally that “businessman candidacy” and public policy are jointly determined by the institutional environment. When institutions that hold elected officials accountable to voters are strong, businessmen receive little preferential treatment and are disinclined to run for office. When such institutions are weak, businessmen can subvert policy irrespective of whether they hold office, but they may run for office to avoid the cost of lobbying elected officials. Evidence from Russian gubernatorial elections supports the model's predictions. Businessman candidates emerge in regions with low media freedom and government transparency, institutions that raise the cost of reneging on campaign promises. Among regions with weaker institutions, professional politicians crowd out businessmen when the rents from office are especially large.
Related by author
50 publications found
Damaged Collateral And Firm‑Level Finance: Evidence From Russia’s War In Ukraine
Publisher: Journal of Comparative Economics
Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Mariia Panga
War, Collateral Damage, And Firm‑Level Consequences
Publisher: World Bank Group
Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Mariia Panga
Obfuscating Ownership
Publisher: The National Science Foundation
Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Anton Shirikov
Democratization as a Continuous Choice: A Comment on Acemoglu and Robinson’s Correction to “Why Did the West Extend the Franchise?”
Publisher: The Journal of Politics
Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Steven Nafziger, Paul Castañeda Dower, Evgeny Finkel
Investment Without Democracy: Ruling‑Party Institutionalization And Credible Commitment In Autocracies
Publisher: Journal of Comparative Economics
Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Philip Keefer
Is Putin’ Popularity Real?
Publisher: Post-Soviet Affairs
Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Timothy Frye, Kyle L. Marquardt, Ora John Reuter
Preventing Predation: Oligarchs, Obfuscation, And Political Connections
Publisher: SSRN
Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Anton Shirikov
Is Putin’S Popularity (Still) Real? A Cautionary Note On Using List Experiments To Measure Popularity In Authoritarian Regimes
Publisher: Post-Soviet Affairs
Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Timothy Frye, Ora John Reuter, Kyle L. Marquardt
The Oligarch Vanishes: Defensive Ownership, Property Rights, And Political Connections
Publisher: SSRN
Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Anton Shirikov, Scott Gehlbach
Formal Models of Nondemocratic Politics
Publisher: Annual Review of Political Science
Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Konstantin Sonin, Milan W. Svolik