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Department of Economics, UCSC
University of California, Santa Cruz

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Pressure Groups And Political Advertising: How Uninformed Voters Can Use Strategic Rules Of Thumb
Donald Wittman, UCSC

Download the Paper (2.8 MB, PDF file) - February 1, 2005 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:

This paper shows how uninformed but rational voters can respond intelligently to political advertising.

The paper models a situation where a candidate must rely on a pressure group for financing political advertising. The pressure group uses its power over the purse to influence the position chosen by the candidate. Nevertheless, when uninformed voters use a strategic rule of thumb, pressure-group contributions always move the outcome of the election closer to the median voter. By using such a rule of thumb, when there is advertising, uninformed voters can have the same influence on the election as informed voters.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Donald Wittman, "Pressure Groups And Political Advertising: How Uninformed Voters Can Use Strategic Rules Of Thumb" (February 1, 2005). Department of Economics, UCSC. Paper 589.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucscecon/589

 
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