Article · 2012

Political Behavior

Ecologies of Unease: Geographic Context and National Economic Evaluations

The study finds that local economic conditions, including unemployment, fuel prices, and foreclosures, significantly shape national economic evaluations, especially among political independents, during the 2008 U.S.

Andrew Reeves and James G. Gimpel

The publication begins with a motivating question: To what extent do local economic conditions influence individuals’ evaluations of the national economy, and how does this vary by partisanship and other individual characteristics?

Its central contribution is to show that the study finds that local economic conditions, including unemployment, fuel prices, and foreclosures, significantly shape national economic evaluations, especially among political independents, during the 2008 U.S.

It matters because the findings connect institutional choices to the way authority, public responsibility, and political behavior are experienced in practice.

  • Local economic conditions, including unemployment, fuel prices, and foreclosures, significantly influence national economic evaluations.
  • The effect of local economic conditions is strongest among political independents and recent movers.
  • Foreclosure rates had a particularly strong impact on negative economic evaluations in hard-hit states and media markets.
  • News consumption heightens sensitivity to local unemployment in shaping national economic assessments.
  • Partisan identification remains a strong predictor, but local context matters especially for less partisan individuals.
Design
Article
Data
2008 Cooperative Congressional Election Study (CCES) survey; RealtyTrac (home mortgage foreclosure data); GasBuddy.com (monthly gasoline price data); U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics (monthly unemployment rate)
Geography
United States (various definitions of local context: state, media market, county-based regions)
Time Period
2008 (U.S. presidential election year)
Unit of Analysis
Individual survey respondent nested within local regions
Methods
Multilevel modeling (hierarchical linear models) of survey data nested within various definitions of local context (state, media market, political, economic, and ethnocultural regions).; Analysis of the 2008 Cooperative Congressional Election Study (CCES) survey data.; Inclusion of both individual-level and contextual (regional) economic variables.
Featured visual from Ecologies of Unease: Geographic Context and National Economic Evaluations
Featured visual from the publication
Full Abstract

Assessment of the nation’s economic performance has been repeatedly linked to voters’ decision-making in U.S. presidential elections. Here we inquire as to where those economic evaluations originate. One possibility in the politicized environment of a major campaign is that they are partisan determinations and do not reflect actual economic circumstances. Another possibility is that these judgments arise from close attention to news media, which is presumably highlighting national economic conditions as a facet of campaign coverage. Still a third explanation is that voters derive their national economic evaluations from living out their lives in particular localities which may or may not be experiencing the conditions that affect the nation as a whole. Drawing upon data from the 2008 presidential election, we find that varying local conditions do shape the economic evaluations of political independents. Moreover, unemployment is not the only salient factor, as fuel prices and foreclosures also figured prominently. Local economic factors, what we call geotropic considerations, shape national economic evaluations especially for those who aren’t making these judgments on simple partisan grounds.

Political Behavior 34 (3): 507-534.

Venue
Political Behavior
Volume
34
Issue
3
Pages
507-534
DOI
10.1007/s11109-011-9167-8