Politsplaining: Populism Breeds Populism
METADATA ONLY
Loading...
Author / Producer
Date
2019-08
Publication Type
Working Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
Citations
Altmetric
METADATA ONLY
Data
Rights / License
Abstract
We suggest a particular notion of populism. A populist is a politician who engages in so-called "politsplaining": He explains complex developments and assigns weights to potential causes and potential remedies as it best suits his objectives. We present a simple model of politsplaining in which two candidates compete for office. The income of citizens is affected by two shocks (say automation and globalization), but citizens only observe the joint shock impact and cannot identify which shocks occur. By using politsplaining, a candidate turns into a populist and he can reallocate beliefs about the causes of income shocks in the society. This results in two types of consequences. First, a populist may be able to form a majority for measures that are not only inefficient, but are applied in areas in which the underlying cause is not present. Second, a populist forces the other candidate to become populist, but the two populists are not offsetting each other.
Permanent link
Publication status
published
Editor
Book title
Journal / series
Volume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Centre for Economic Policy Research
Event
Edition / version
Methods
Software
Geographic location
Date collected
Date created
Subject
Politsplaining; Populism; Elections
Organisational unit
03729 - Gersbach, Hans / Gersbach, Hans