• Monday, July 26, 2010
    During yesterday’s lazy Sunday morning, I several times teased you that it was really still night time. “...
  • Wednesday, July 21, 2010
    I listened to a backlog of podcasts on a log drive to Kentucky this evening, and was treated to quite a collection of...
  • Wednesday, July 14, 2010
    …when I realize after dropping Arica off at work and you at daycare that I have left something important at ...
  • Tuesday, July 6, 2010
    More July 4 photos to come.
  • Saturday, June 26, 2010
    Since getting an iPad for father’s day, I’ve checked a couple of times on what information is out there on...

FEMA and Patronage

Via Robert Farley and the Monkey Cage here’s some hot political science from Jowei Chen:

In the aftermath of the summer 2004 Florida hurricane season, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) distributed $1.2 billion in disaster aid to Florida residents. This research presents two empirical findings that collectively suggest the Bush administration engaged in vote buying behavior. First, by tracking the geographic location of each aid recipient, the data reveal that FEMA treated applicants from Republican neighborhoods much more favorably than those from Democratic or moderate neighborhoods, even conditioning on hurricane severity, home value, and demographic factors. Second, I compare precinct-level vote counts from the post-hurricane (November 2004) and pre-hurricane (November 2002) elections to measure the effect of FEMA aid on Bush’s vote share. Using a two-stage least squares estimator, this analysis reveals that core Republican voters are easily swayed by FEMA aid - $16,800 buys one additional vote for Bush - while Democrats and moderates are not. Collectively, these results suggest the Bush administration maximized its 2004 vote share by concentrating FEMA disaster aid among core Republicans.

As Farley says, this kind of finding makes you think about Katrina and New Orleans; would the response have been nearly so inept and ineffective if the victimized area had been more of a GOP-friendly kind of place?

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