2022
DOI: 10.1257/app.20200482
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How Effective Are Monetary Incentives to Vote? Evidence from a Nationwide Policy

Abstract: We study voters’ response to marginal changes to the fine for electoral abstention in Peru, leveraging variation from a nationwide reform. A smaller fine has a robust, negative effect on voter turnout, partly through irregular changes in voter registration. However, representation is largely unaffected, as most of the lost votes are blank or invalid. We also show that the effect of an exemption from compulsory voting is substantially larger than that of a full fine reduction, suggesting that nonmonetary incent… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…Our finding that elderly's turnout did not respond to the repeal of CV could come from a CV exemption for the elderly, as it was the case for other CV experiences in other countries (Gonzales et al, 2019), but that was not the case for Austria.…”
Section: Turnout In Municipal and Parliamentary Electionsmentioning
confidence: 59%
“…Our finding that elderly's turnout did not respond to the repeal of CV could come from a CV exemption for the elderly, as it was the case for other CV experiences in other countries (Gonzales et al, 2019), but that was not the case for Austria.…”
Section: Turnout In Municipal and Parliamentary Electionsmentioning
confidence: 59%