research articles
MELISSA J. MARSCHALL
Rice University
ANIRUDH V.S. RUHIL
Ohio University
Fiscal Effects of the Voter Initiative Reconsidered:
Addressing Endogeneity
Several recent studies have investigated the relationship between direct democracy
and public policy outcomes, with mixed findings. These inconsistencies may stem,
in part, from researchers’ failure to recognize that direct democracy institutions are
distributed nonrandomly across the American states. That is, certain factors may
lead a state to adopt the initiative process and influence other policy choices. We
revisit the question of how the initiative influences state fiscal policy using panel
data from 1960–2000 and a full-information maximum likelihood estimator that
explicitly accounts for the endogeneity of the initiative. Our findings suggest that
failure to endogenize the initiative in empirical analyses leads to substantially biased
estimates of its effects. In particular, we find that once factors that predict whether
a state has adopted the initiative are controlled, the initiative has a positive effect on
state revenue generation and spending.
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