The economy and the presidential vote: What leading indicators reveal
well in advance
Erikson, R.S.
, Wlezien, C.
Pages 218-226
AbstractEverybody knows that ''the economy'' matters in presidential elections,
but how can one incorporate economic information in an early forecasting
equation? Our economic forecasting tool is the cumulative growth of leading
indicators during a presidential term-weighting recent growth most
heavily-which provides an early warning, as early as quarter 1 of the
election year, about the Election Day economy. To control for other,
non-economic factors, our model also includes presidential approval or
trial-heat polls. In this paper we show how cumulative leading indicators
measured early in the election year actually reveal as much about the final
vote as cumulative income growth observed on the eve of the election. That
is, voters respond at least as much to economic change that is predicted
well in advance of elections as to economic surprises that are felt during
the course of the campaign. Approval judgments incorporate these effects
over the course of the election year. Very late economic shocks matter, to
be sure, but they are not known until well after the campaign. The findings
are informative about how the economy matters on Election Day, and have
implications for our ability to forecast the outcome well in advance.
Keywords: Forecasting
, Elections
, Approval
, Polls
, Time series