research articles
MELISSA J. MARSCHALL
Rice University
ANIRUDH V.S. RUHIL
Ohio University
Of Models and Methods: A Response to Matsusaka
Do instruments of direct democracy affect policymaking and, if
so, how? The political science literature is rife with increasingly sophisticated
empirical efforts to answer these questions (Matsusaka 2004; Lupia
and Matsusaka 2004). Having expended much energy over the past two
decades studying the initiative’s effects on state and local policy, Matsusaka
(1995, 2004) is convinced that initiative states spend and tax less than
states without the initiative (2004, 3; 1995). Agnostic about whether initiative
states spend and tax more or less than noninitiative states but puzzled
by scholars’ failure to account for the endogeneity of the initiative in their
models, we sought to determine whether the fiscal conservatism ascribed to
the initiative remained after explicitly modeling states’ initiative status. Our
study, published in this issue of State Politics and Policy Quarterly contradicts
Matsusaka’s conclusions.
In commenting on our study, Matsusaka (2005) argues that our results
are fragile and can be rejected on both theoretical and empirical grounds. To
support this argument, he offers an alternative model that both tweaks our
fundamental specification and introduces a quaint variable that ostensibly
brings the estimation of initiative effects in line with the “rest of the literature”
(2005, 356). In this rejoinder, we demonstrate that neither of these
claims is true. First, we show that the empirical evidence on the fiscal conservatism
effect of the initiative in the scholarly literature is far from unanimous.
Second, we demonstrate that our key finding regarding the endogeneity of
the initiative holds up under alternative model specifications, including the
one Matsusaka (2005) proposes in his Model 2.1
Regarding the alternative specifications Matsusaka reports in his comment,
despite considerable effort and a good deal of creativity, we were unable
to reproduce his Model 2 findings, especially the negative coefficient on the initiative dummy. As for Model 3, by specifying the initiative as a function of
initiative status in 1920, Matsusaka has, for all intents and purposes, rendered
the question of endogeneity moot. Given the lack of variation in initiative
status between the two time points, initiative status in 1920 is a nearly perfect
predictor of current initiative status. This result not only renders the assignment
equation in his Model 3 superfluous, but it also contributes nothing
to our understanding of what explains initiative status.2
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