Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 10/2009

Who Gets Bought? Vote Buying, Turnout Buying, and Other Strategies

Jordan Gans-Morse, Sebastian Mazzuca, Simeon Nichter

April 2009

Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University

Abstract

During elections in many countries, political parties distribute particularistic benefits to individuals. The existing literature reveals that parties choose from at least five distinct strategies when distributing benefits, but fails to explain how parties allocate resources across these strategies. Our formal model provides insight into this key question. Most studies focus exclusively on "vote buying," a strategy by which parties reward voters for switching their votes. Our model first shows how parties trade off between "vote buying" and "turnout buying," a strategy by which parties reward supporters for showing up at the polls (Nichter 2008). We then show how parties combine these and other commonly observed strategies.