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Does Who Votes Matter? Income Bias in Voter Turnout and Economic Inequality in the American States from 1980 to 2010

机译:谁投票重要? 1980年至2010年美国选民投票率和经济不平等的收入偏见

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A growing body of research examines the political sources of economic inequality in the United States. A second literature examines the political consequences of who votes. The current study contributes to both literatures by examining the influence of income bias in voter turnout on income inequality in the American states from 1980 to 2010. I use power resources theory and research demonstrating growing partisan polarization across income levels as theoretical foundations. Using time-series and cross-sectional analysis, I find that states with greater income bias in turnout have higher levels of income inequality than states with greater parity in voter turnout across income levels, findings that are robust across various model specifications. The implications of these findings for our understanding of economic inequality, low-income voter turnout, and state electoral laws are discussed.
机译:越来越多的研究调查了美国经济不平等的政治根源。第二种文献研究了谁投票的政治后果。本研究通过考察1980年至2010年美国各州投票者的收入偏向对收入不平等的影响,为这两种文献做出了贡献。我使用力量资源理论和研究来证明跨收入水平的党派两极分化日益加剧。通过时间序列和横截面分析,我发现在投票率上收入偏向更大的州比在不同收入水平上的投票率较高的州具有更高的收入不平等水平。讨论了这些发现对我们对经济不平等,低收入选民投票和州选举法的理解的含义。

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