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Original Articles

An econometric analysis of household political giving in the USA

Pages 539-543 | Published online: 26 Feb 2009
 

Abstract

Advocates of political contribution limitations contend that such contributions can transform economic and social inequalities into political inequalities. This article examines the extent to which traditional markers of social and economic power are associated with political giving. A Tobit analysis of 56 663 households participating in the Consumer Expenditure Survey from 1995 to 2005 indicates that political giving is positively associated with income, wealth, education and White racial status and is negatively associated with single female (but not single male) status. A double-hurdle analysis indicates that nonWhite or single female status affects expected giving most clearly through diminished participation in political giving, rather than simply through lower amounts given by such contributors. Descriptive statistics and a multinomial logistic regression suggest that the importance of traditional markers of social and economic status is greater for political giving than for charitable giving or religious giving.

Notes

1Both and report income and assets using a $10 000 unit scale to ease readability of coefficients. Age, gender, marriage and education characteristics are for the interview respondent, all other variables are for the household (consumer unit). Although the regressions include individual year dummy variables for 1996–2005, the Tables do not report these coefficients.

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