What do women want? female suffrage and the size of government
Author
dc.contributor.author
Bravo Ortega, Claudio
Author
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Eterovic, Nicolás A.
es_CL
Author
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Paredes, Valentina
es_CL
Admission date
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2014-12-11T20:26:21Z
Available date
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2014-12-11T20:26:21Z
Publication date
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2014-03
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/122758
Abstract
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The scanty economic literature has attributed to female voting part of the increase in government
expenditure and social government expenditure over the XXth century. This finding results
puzzling considering that the political science literature has documented that women tended to be
more conservative and right wing supporters over the first half of the XXth century across a wide
set of developed and developing countries. We argue that current estimates on this relationship
are afflicted by strong endogeneity bias. Using data for 46 countries we find that the introduction
of female suffrage did not increased in average the social and total government expenditure. In
our estimates we use a novel instrument set related to the diffusion of female suffrage across the
globe. Further, research should focus on the determinants of women preferences across the
political spectrum in order to understand the also documented movement of women towards the
left that has occurred in some countries after the eighties, well after the introduction of female
suffrage.
en_US
Lenguage
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en_US
en_US
Publisher
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Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Economía y Negocios