Economics and Politics
1989 - 2022
Current editor(s): Peter Rosendorff From Wiley Blackwell Bibliographic data for series maintained by Wiley Content Delivery (). Access Statistics for this journal.
Track citations for all items by RSS feed
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
Volume 31, issue 3, 2019
- Does oil substitute for patriarchy? pp. 293-322

- Joel W. Simmons
- Kleptocracy and tax evasion under resource abundance pp. 323-373

- Hamid Mohtadi, Michael L. Ross, Uchechukwu Jarrett and Stefan Ruediger
- The heterogeneous effect of oil discoveries on democracy pp. 374-402

- Tania Masi and Roberto Ricciuti
- Developing global champions: Why national oil companies expand abroad pp. 403-427

- Andrew Cheon
- Labor markets and cultural values: Evidence from Japanese and American views about caregiving immigrants pp. 428-464

- Margaret E. Peters, Rieko Kage, Frances Rosenbluth and Seiki Tanaka
- Anti‐immigration policy in the destination country and skilled–unskilled wage inequality in a source economy with or without unemployment pp. 465-484

- Sarbajit Chaudhuri
- Political corruption and capture of the minority pp. 485-510

- Pierpaolo Giannoccolo and Maurizio Lisciandra
Volume 31, issue 2, 2019
- The effect of income inequality on political polarization: Evidence from European regions, 2002–2014 pp. 137-162

- Hernan Winkler
- Damaging democracy? Security provision and turnout in Afghan elections† pp. 163-193

- Luke N. Condra, Michael Callen, Radha K. Iyengar, James D. Long and Jacob N. Shapiro
- Incomplete integration and contagion of debt distress in economic unions pp. 194-215

- Cem Karayalcin and Harun Onder
- The influence of government ideology on monetary policy: New cross‐country evidence based on dynamic heterogeneous panels pp. 216-239

- Federico M. Giesenow and Jakob de Haan
- Transaction costs and economic growth under common legal system: State‐level evidence from Mexico pp. 240-292

- Rok Spruk and Mitja Kovac
Volume 31, issue 1, 2019
- Exports, jobs, growth! Congressional hearings on US trade agreements pp. 1-26

- Jieun Lee and Iain Osgood
- Do economic sanctions affect protectionism? Evidence from agricultural support pp. 27-42

- Zhike Lv and Ting Xu
- Political budget cycles, incumbency advantage, and propaganda pp. 43-70

- Frank Bohn
- No better time than now: Future uncertainty and private investment under dictatorship pp. 71-96

- Michael Albertus and Victor Gay
- Why principals tolerate biases of inaccurate agents pp. 97-111

- Kimiko Terai and Amihai Glazer
- Public investment under autocracy and social unrest pp. 112-135

- Johnson Gwatipedza and Thorsten Janus
Volume 30, issue 3, 2018
- Global capital markets, housing prices, and partisan fiscal policies pp. 307-339

- Ben W. Ansell, J. Lawrence Broz and Thomas Flaherty
- Sovereign credit ratings and central banks: Why do analysts pay attention to institutions? pp. 340-365

- Cristina Bodea and Raymond Hicks
- FDI, Poverty, and the Politics of Potable Water Access pp. 366-393

- Nita Rudra, Meir Alkon and Siddharth Joshi
- Transparency and currency crises pp. 394-422

- Nam Kyu Kim
- Endogenous trade policy in general equilibrium: An interaction of redistribution rule, trade openness, and labor market condition pp. 423-443

- Ram C. Acharya
- Does protectionism harm unskilled workers? pp. 444-450

- Hamid Beladi, Sugata Marjit and Reza Oladi
Volume 30, issue 2, 2018
- Protecting Property: The Politics of Redistribution, Expropriation, and Market Openness pp. 181-210

- Amy Pond
- The politics of special purpose trust funds pp. 211-255

- Vera Eichenauer and Simon Hug
- Special interest politics: Contribution schedules vs. Nash bargaining pp. 256-273

- Achim Voß and Mark Schopf
- When trade liberalization is self†fulfilling: Population aging and uncertainty pp. 274-306

- Daiki Kishishita
Volume 30, issue 1, 2018
- Documenting the unauthorized: Political responses to unauthorized immigration pp. 1-26

- Nicole Rae Baerg, Julie Hotchkiss and Myriam Quispe†Agnoli
- Misperceiving inequality pp. 27-54

- Vladimir Gimpelson and Daniel Treisman
- Nothing to hide: Commitment to, compliance with, and impact of the special data dissemination standard pp. 55-77

- Krishna Chaitanya Vadlamannati, Arusha Cooray and Samuel Brazys
- Police Violence and the Underreporting of Crime pp. 78-105

- Daniel W. Gingerich and Virginia Oliveros
- Reform, informal sector, and extortion pp. 106-123

- Biswajit Mandal, Sugata Marjit and Hamid Beladi
- Functional components of public expenditure, fiscal consolidations, and economic activity pp. 124-150

- VÃtor Castro
- Government size and economic growth in an endogenous growth model with rent†seeking pp. 151-179

- Waqar Wadho and Umair Ayaz
Volume 29, issue 3, 2017
- Tipping the (Im)balance: Capital inflows, financial market structure, and banking crises pp. 179-208

- Mark Copelovitch and David A. Singer
- Foreign direct investment and inequality in developing countries: Does sector matter? pp. 209-236

- Juan A. Bogliaccini and Patrick J. W. Egan
- Strategic delegation in asymmetric tax competition pp. 237-251

- Hikaru Ogawa and Taiki Susa
- Monetary integration, soft budget constraints, and the EMU sovereign debt crises pp. 252-275

- Thushyanthan Baskaran and Zohal Hessami
Volume 29, issue 2, 2017
- Risky business: Institutions vs. social networks in FDI pp. 91-117

- Sonal Pandya and David Leblang
- Allies or commitment devices? A model of appointments to the Federal Reserve pp. 118-132

- Keith E. Schnakenberg, Ian R. Turner and Alicia Uribe-McGuire
- State capacity and the quality of policies. Revisiting the relationship between openness and government size pp. 133-156

- María Franco Chuaire, Carlos Scartascini and Mariano Tommasi
- Political budget cycles: Evidence from Italian cities pp. 157-177

- Alberto Alesina and Matteo Paradisi
Volume 29, issue 1, 2017
- The twilight of the setter? Public school budgets in a time of institutional change pp. 1-21

- Sean Corcoran, Thomas Romer and Howard Rosenthal
- Remittances and incumbency: Theory and evidence pp. 22-47

- Faisal Z. Ahmed
- Trade and the Recognition of Commercial Lingua Francas: Russian Language Laws in Post-Soviet Countries pp. 48-68

- Amy H. Liu, Megan Roosevelt and Sarah Wilson Sokhey
- Financing Education in Europe: The Globalization Perspective pp. 69-90

- Zeynep Ozkok
Volume 28, issue 3, 2016
- Partisan Cycles in Offshore Outsourcing: Evidence from U.S. Imports pp. 233-261

- Pablo M. Pinto and Stephen Weymouth
- Preferential Liberalization, Antidumping, and Safeguards: Stumbling Block Evidence from MERCOSUR pp. 262-294

- Chad Bown and Patricia Tovar
- A Theory of Why the Ruthless Revolt pp. 295-316

- Joshua Hendrickson and Alexander Salter
- Fiscal Transparency, Elections and Public Employment: Evidence from the OECD pp. 317-341

- Lasse Aaskoven
- Borrowed Time: Sovereign Finance, Regime Type, and Leader Survival pp. 342-367

- Matthew DiGiuseppe and Patrick E. Shea
- Tullock's Puzzle in Pay-and-Play Lobbying pp. 368-389

- Martin Gregor
Volume 28, issue 2, 2016
- Differentiated Products, Divided Industries: Firm Preferences over Trade Liberalization pp. 161-180

- Iain Osgood
- Information Manipulation in Election Campaigns pp. 181-215

- Kemal Kivanc Akoz and Cemal Eren Arbatli
- Like Me, Buy Me: The Effect of Soft Power on Exports pp. 216-232

- Andrew Rose
Volume 28, issue 1, 2016
- Competitive General Equilibrium with Finite Change and Theory of Policy Making pp. 1-7

- Hamid Beladi, Avik Chakrabarti and Sugata Marjit
- International Trade, Migration and Unemployment – The Role of Informal Sector pp. 8-22

- Sugata Marjit and Biswajit Mandal
- Substituting Distribution for Growth: The Political Logic of Intergovernmental Transfers in the Russian Federation pp. 23-54

- Israel Marques, Eugenia Nazrullaeva and Andrei Yakovlev
- Political Leaders' Socioeconomic Background and Public Budget Deficits: Evidence from OECD Countries pp. 55-78

- Bernd Hayo and Florian Neumeier
- What does IT Take for Congress to Enact Good Policies? an Analysis of Roll Call Voting in the US Congress pp. 79-104

- Matias Iaryczower and Gabriel Katz
- Exchange Rate Populism pp. 105-132

- Sainan Huang and Cristina Terra
- Fiscal Federalism and Legislative Malapportionment: Causal Evidence from Independent but Related Natural Experiments pp. 133-159

- Sebastian Galiani, Iván Torre and Gustavo Torrens
| |