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Service-Induced Campaign Contributions and the Electoral Equilibrium

David P. Baron

Stanford University

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1989

Candidates for office are modeled as promising services, such as support for legislation and intervention in the bureaucracy, to interest groups in exchange for campaign contributions. An electoral equilibrium is characterized in which candidates choose service-contribution offers and interest groups choose whether to contribute. The model provides several explanations of congressional incumbents' success in over 90 percent of their reelection contests: a recognition advantage, a high personal valuation of the office, a lower cost of providing services, and policy alignment with high demand interest groups. The model yields predictions that are consistent with empirical findings on the relation between campaign contributions and election outcomes.

DOI
10.2307/2937834
Volume
104 (1)
Pages
45
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