1. Essays in political economy
- Author
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Torres Raposo, Felipe, Duch, Raymond, Ruiz, Nelson, and Matakos, Konstantinos
- Subjects
Political science ,Economics ,Political statistics - Abstract
The following document outlines the research projects that I have conducted so far and would like to undertake in the upcoming academic year. The goal is to answer the following overreaching research questions: What information is relevant to voters when it comes to getting information about malfeasance, and do voters update to 'informative' signals? There has been a recent number of studies focusing on the relationship between information and accountability. Most recently, EGAP's Metaketa project has shown that information tends to have little or no effect on party preferences or voting behaviour. Several explanations have been proposed to understand these findings. Furthermore, there is significant discrepancy between survey experiments and field experiments. This research project would seek to contribute to the field by providing empirical evidence on the different stages of the information chain. This thesis is structured as a three-papers work. Paper 1 is a field experiment conducted in cooperation with the Comptroller General Office (CGO) in Chile and the local NGO Chile Transparente during the municipal elections held in May 2021. This paper looks at whether voters update in response to information about malfeasance at their local government. The study was conducted just before the municipal elections in 116 out of 345 communes in Chile. Paper 2 focuses on the importance of informational architecture and how it affects the way citizens assess the reliability and trustworthiness of the information provided. A key component of Bayesian belief updating is that the signals should be informative and provide digestible quantitative information. This paper seeks to explore this premise by using an innovative methodological approach. I conducted an adaptive design experiment, which has rarely been implemented in the field of political science and compare its results with those of a conventional static experiment. Paper 3 is a methodological paper that aims to assess the reliability of a Randomised Item Response Technique (RIRT) to measure the prevalence of corrupt behaviour at the local level. This paper is mainly motivated to explore unobtrusive and relatively new indirect survey techniques to measure the prevalence of corrupt behaviour. The purpose of conducting this technique is to yield both population and individual-level measures of experienced-based corruption. I also provide evidence of bias-corrected estimates due to inattentiveness. For the viva, I report population and individual-level estimates obtained from the RIRT.
- Published
- 2023