How effective are monetary incentives to vote? Evidence from a nationwide policy

Other authors

Universitat Pompeu Fabra. Departament d'Economia i Empresa

Publication date

2020-05-25T09:26:50Z

2020-05-25T09:26:50Z

2018-12-01

2020-05-25T09:26:03Z

Abstract

We combine two natural experiments, multiple empirical strategies and administrative data to study voters' response to marginal changes to the fine for electoral abstention in Peru. A smaller fine leads to a robust decrease in voter turnout. However, the drop in turnout caused by a full ne reduction is less than 20% the size of that caused by an exemption from compulsory voting, indicating the predominance of the non-monetary incentives provided by the mandate to vote. Additionally, almost 90% of the votes generated by a marginally larger ne are blank or invalid, lending support to the hypothesis of rational abstention. Higher demand for information and larger long-run effects following an adjustment to the value of the ne point to the existence of informational frictions that limit adaptation to institutional changes.

Document Type

Working document

Language

English

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Economics and Business Working Papers Series; 1667

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http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/

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