The chancellor model: Forecasting German elections
Norpoth, H.
, Gschwend, T.
Pages 42-53
AbstractOur forecast model for German Bundestag elections relies on three
predictors: (1) the popularity of the incumbent chancellor (hence the
christening of it as the ''Chancellor Model''); (2) the long-term partisan
balance in the German electorate; and (3) the cost of ruling, as captured
by the tenure of the government in office. The model forecasts the vote
share of the governing parties (typically two, such as Social Democrats and
Greens, or Christian Democrats and Free Democrats), except for instances of
a grand coalition. The coefficients of the predictors are estimated based
on elections since 1949, the beginning of the Federal Republic. The
out-of-sample forecasts of the model deviate from the actual results by
just over one percentage point, on average. The first real-time test of the
model came in 2002. The forecast issued three months before Election Day
picked the incumbent vote share to the decimal (47.1% for the SPD-Greens
coalition); for the 2005 election, called a year early, our forecast three
weeks before Election Day was just three-tenths of a percentage off the
mark. For the upcoming election, we offer separate forecasts, conditional
at this moment, for each of the two parties in the grand coalition.
Keywords: Election forecasting
, Government popularity
, German elections
, Multivariate models