Working Paper

Economic Shocks and Populism: The Political Implications of Reference-Dependent Preferences

Fausto Panunzi, Nicola Pavoni, Guido Tabellini
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8539

This paper studies electoral competition over redistributive taxes between a safe incumbent and a risky opponent. As in prospect theory, economically disappointed voters become risk lovers, and hence are attracted by the more risky candidate. We show that, after a large adverse economic shock, the equilibrium can display policy divergence: the intrinsically more risky candidate proposes lower taxes and is supported by a coalition of very rich and very disappointed voters, while the safe candidate proposes higher taxes. This can explain why new populist parties are often supported by economically dissatisfied voters and yet they run on economic policy platforms of low redistribution. We show that survey data on the German SOEP are consistent with our theoretical predictions on voters’ behavior.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: populism, prospect theory, behavioral political economics
JEL Classification: H000, D700, D900