Turnout and Closeness: Evidence from 60 Years of Bavarian Mayoral Elections

Author: A Blais, A C Eggers, A Dhillon, A Downs, B Fraga, B Geys, B Grofman, B T Gomez, C Fauvelle-Aymar, C.-J Schild, D Kahneman, F Ade, F Arnold, F Ferreira, Felix Arnold, G Kirchg�ssner, G Kirchg�ssner, G Simonovits, G W Cox, G W Cox, H Fehr-Duda, I H Indridason, J J Andersen, J L Lawless, J Tukiainen, J W Endersby, M A Kayser, M De Paola, M Gentzkow, R Freier, R Freier, R Freier, R Shachar, S Garmann, T G Hansford, T Schwartz, W H Riker, � A Kiss
Publisher: Elsevier BV

ABOUT BOOK

One prediction of the calculus of voting is that electoral closeness positively affects turnout via a higher probability of one vote being decisive. I test this theory with data on all mayoral elections in the German state of Bavaria between 1946 and 2009. Importantly, I use constitutionally prescribed two-round elections to measure electoral closeness and thereby improve on existing work that mostly uses ex- post measures that are prone to endogeneity. The results suggest that electoral closeness matters: A one standard deviation increase in close- ness increases turnout by 1.68 percentage points, which corresponds to 1 6 of a standard deviation in this variable. I also evaluate how other factors like electorate size or rain on election day affect turnout differentially depending on the closeness of the race

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