1,721,042 research outputs found
Replication Data for “Equal Treatment and the Inelasticity of Tax Policy to Rising Inequality”
Scheve & Stasavage (2021, Comparative Political Studies) “Equal Treatment and the Inelasticity of Tax Policy to Rising Inequality
Replication Data for: “Self-Centered Inequity Aversion and the Mass Politics of Taxation”
Replications data for Lu, Xiaobo and Scheve, Kenneth (Forthcoming). “Self-Centered Inequity Aversion and the Mass Politics of Taxation.” Comparative Political Studies
Replication Data for: “Self-Centered Inequity Aversion and the Mass Politics of Taxation”
Replications data for Lu, Xiaobo and Scheve, Kenneth (Forthcoming). “Self-Centered Inequity Aversion and the Mass Politics of Taxation.” Comparative Political Studies
Replication Data for: Trains, Trade, and Transformation: A Spatial Rogowski Theory of America's 19th Century Protectionism
We study the effect of expanding trade on societal coalitions through its impact on development. We combine a majoritarian political model with a spatial model of trade to argue that trade-induced economic change---by bringing new workers to locations closer to world markets---can lead to losses rather than gains in political power for the factors of production advantaged by increased trade. We study how this phenomenon explains rising protectionism in the US from 1880 to 1900. Using county-level changes in transportation costs induced by railroad expansion, our estimates indicate that falling costs increased population and farm values but reduced the proportion of farmers. Reduced transportation costs caused a reduction in vote shares for the Democratic Party, which favored liberal trade policies, and an increase in an original newspaper-based measure of protectionist sentiment. Expanding trade alters not only political interests but also the geographic distribution of those interests
Replication Data for: "Inequality and redistribution behavior in a give-or-take game"
Replication Data for: "Inequality and redistribution behavior in a give-or-take game
Pre-analysis plan on mass support for dynamic climate policy
Pre-analysis plan for a study on mass support for dynamic climate policy. This extends previous work on climate policy support and social norms (Bechtel/Scheve 2013 PNAS, Bechtel/Scheve 2017 JEPS, Bechtel/Liesch/Scheve 2018 PNAS, Bechtel/Genovese/Scheve 2018 BJPS)
Pre-analysis plan on mass support for dynamic climate policy
Pre-analysis plan for a study on mass support for dynamic climate policy. This extends previous work on climate policy support and social norms (Bechtel/Scheve 2013 PNAS, Bechtel/Scheve 2017 JEPS, Bechtel/Liesch/Scheve 2018 PNAS, Bechtel/Genovese/Scheve 2018 BJPS)
Replication Data for: "Inequality and redistribution behavior in a give-or-take game"
Replication Data for: "Inequality and redistribution behavior in a give-or-take game
Technology and the Era of the Mass Army
We investigate how technology has influenced the size of armies. During the nineteenth century, the development of the railroad made it possible to field and support mass armies, significantly increasing the observed size of military forces. During the late twentieth century, further advances in technology made it possible to deliver explosive force from a distance and with precision, making
mass armies less desirable. We find support for our technological account using a new data set covering thirteen great powers between 1600 and 2000. We find little evidence that the French Revolution was a watershed in terms of levels of mobilization
Replication data for: Mass Support for Climate Cooperation Depends on Institutional Design
Replication archive for Bechtel, Michael M./Scheve, Kenneth F. 2013. Mass Support for Climate Cooperation Depends on Institutional Design, in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2013/07/24/1306374110.full.pdf+htm
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