Description
How well does public policy represent mass preferences in U.S. states? Current approaches provide an incomplete account of statehouse democracy because they fail to compare preferences and policies on meaningful scales. Here we overcome this problem by generating estimates of Americans' preferences on the minimum wage and compare them to observed policies both within and across states. Because we measure both preferences and policies on the same scale (U.S. dollars), we can quantify both the association of policy outcomes with preferences across states (responsiveness) and their deviation within states (bias). We demonstrate that while minimum wages respond to corresponding preferences across states, policy outcomes are more conservative than preferences in each state, with the average policy bias amounting to about two dollars. We also show that policy bias is substantially smaller in states with access to direct democratic institutions.
| Date made available | 2018 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Harvard Dataverse |
Research output
- 1 Article
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Responsiveness without Representation: Evidence from Minimum Wage Laws in U.S. States
Simonovits, G., Guess, A. M. & Nagler, J., Apr 2019, In: American Journal of Political Science. 63, 2, p. 401-410 10 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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