Publications

The Senate Electoral Cycle and Bicameral Appropriations Politics
Download: PDF 222.45 KB
by Shepsle, Kenneth A.; Abrams, Samuel; Van Houweling, Robert; Hanson, Peter
We consider the consequences of the Senate electoral cycle and bicameralism for distributive politics, introducing the concept of contested credit claiming, i.e. that members of a state’s House and Senate delegations must share the credit for appropriations that originate in their chamber with delegation members in the other chamber. Using data that isolates appropriations of each chamber, we test a model of the strategic incentives contested credit claiming creates. Our empirical analysis indicates that the Senate electoral cycle induces a back-loading of benefi…ts to the end of senatorial terms, but that the House blunts this tendency with countercyclical appropriations. Our analysis informs our understanding of appropriations earmarking, and points a way forward in studying the larger consequences of bicameral legislatures.
Publication Type: WCFIA Working Paper
Published Date: July 31, 2007
Field of Interest: Comparative Politics
Shepsle, Kenneth A., and Robert Van Houweling, Samuel Abrams, and Peter Hanson. "The Senate Electoral Cycle and Bicameral Appropriations Politics." Working Paper 2008-0113, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University, July 31, 2007.