Leitner Program: “Reputation Effects and Incumbency (Dis)Advantage”

Event time: 
Thursday, November 2, 2017 - 12:00pm to 1:30pm
Location: 
Rosenkranz Hall (RKZ ), 005 See map
115 Prospect Street
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

The Leitner Program at  Yale presents:

Navin Kartik, Professor in the Department of Economics at Columbia University:  “Reputation Effects and Incumbency (Dis)Advantage.”

He specializes in Microeconomic Theory, Game Theory, and Political Economy, and Organizational Economics.

“We study dynamic models of electoral accountability. Politicians’ policy preferences are their private information, so officeholders act to influence the electorate’s beliefs—i.e., to build reputation—and improve their re-election prospects. The resulting behavior may be socially desirable (“good reputation effects”) or undesirable (“bad reputation effects”). When newly- elected officeholders face stronger reputation pressures than their established counterparts, good reputation effects give rise to incumbency disadvantage while bad reputation effects induce incumbency advantage, all else equal. We relate these results to empirical patterns on incumbency effects across democracies.”

Open to: 
General Public