Public employees lining up at the polls—the conditional effect of living and working in the same municipality

Yosef Bhatti, Kasper Møller Hansen

    10 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Do public employees vote more frequently than private employees? The turnout of public employees has been of central interest to public choice scholars for almost a century. Utilizing a government records dataset that is not subject to over-reporting and differential social desirability bias, we find that public employees voted 11-12 percentage points more than their counterparts in the private sector. In a multivariate analysis, however, the effect is only four to five percentage points greater for local government public employees, which is in the lower range of previous studies. We are able to distinguish between local government and central government employees and show that the latter vote two percentage points less than the former. Controlling for the specific type of educational background does not explain the public-private turnout differential. Finally, the effect of working and voting in the same municipality is larger for local government employees than other citizens. This is in accordance with their greater incentives as they elect their future employer, though the effect size is surprisingly small.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalPublic Choice
    Volume156
    Issue number3-4
    Pages (from-to)611-629
    Number of pages19
    ISSN0048-5829
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2013

    Keywords

    • Faculty of Social Sciences

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