Publication: Cognitive Ability, Union Membership, and Voter Turnout
Loading...
Date
2019
Authors
Advisor
Court
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Defense Date
Citation

DOI
Abstract
Labor unions are said to in uence elections and public policy by increasing their members’ electoral turnout. But existing research likely overestimates the turnout effect of union membership by ignoring sorting in the labor market. In the presence of a union wage premium, both membership and turnout are shaped by the same (unobserved) factors, such as cognitive ability. To disentangle the union effect from positive selection, we use unique data from the U.S. National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. It allows us to specify a latent factor potential outcome model with matching on both observable and unobservable individual characteristics. We find that about one-third of the observed union turnout effect is due to selection, more than what previous studies suggest.
Unesco subjects
License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
School
IE School of Politics, Economics & Global Affairs
Center
Keywords
Citation
StegmĂĽller, D., & Becher, M. (2019). Cognitive Ability, Union Membership, and Voter Turnout. Duke University: Working Paper.