← Search

The Probability of Being President

W. Mark Crain; Harold C. Messenheimer; Robert D. Tollison

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1993

Economic models of politics typically use the expected value of a candidate's vote share to proxy electoral probability. In this paper, the authors introduce a risk calculation to augment the evaluation of a candidate's (or party's) expected vote share and they divide this risk element into its systematic and unsystematic components. For the same reason that systematic risk is a primary focus of portfolio management, the authors discover that an analogous systematic risk component is central to presidential elections. Their approach accounts for correlations in vote swings among states, piercing the fiction of a state-by-state or 'local' campaign strategy. Copyright 1993 by MIT Press.

DOI
10.2307/2110022
Volume
75 (4)
Pages
683
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref