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Adam Dynes on Noisy Retrospection: The Effect of Party Control on Policy Outcomes – #35

Adam Dynes on Noisy Retrospection: The Effect of Party Control on Policy Outcomes – #35

FromManifold


Adam Dynes on Noisy Retrospection: The Effect of Party Control on Policy Outcomes – #35

FromManifold

ratings:
Length:
62 minutes
Released:
Feb 27, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Steve and Corey talk to Adam Dynes of Brigham Young University about whether voting has an effect on policy outcomes. Adam’s work finds that control of state legislatures or governorships does not have an observable effect on macroscopic variables such as crime rates, the economy, etc. Possible explanations: parties push essentially the same policies, politicians don’t keep promises, monied interest control everything. Are voting decisions just noisy mood affiliation? Perhaps time is better spent obsessing about sports teams, which at least generates pleasure.Topics

1:22 – What is retrospective voting?

5:43 – Research findings on retrospective voting

14:02 – Uniparty/Monied interests?

17:23 – Martin Gilens’ research

23:10 – Are people just voting based on noise or mood affiliation?

27:13 – Bryan Caplan – Myth of the Rational Voter

34:35 – Is time better spent obsessing about sports teams, which at least generates pleasure?

39:42 – After the fall of Athens, was democracy commonly referred to as irrational mob rule?

48:22 – Does this research translate to the national level?

52:19 – Super Nerdy Stuff: Statistical Analysis, Reproducibility & Null Results

56:40 – Reactions to the results
Resources
Transcript
Adam Dynes (Personal Website)
Adam Dynes (Faculty Profile)
Noisy Retrospection: The Effect of Party Control on Policy Outcomes
Released:
Feb 27, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Steve Hsu is a Professor of Theoretical Physics and Computational Mathematics, Science, and Engineering at Michigan State University. Join him for wide-ranging conversations with leading writers, scientists, technologists, academics, entrepreneurs, investors, and more.