TY - JOUR
T1 - Importing political polarization? The electoral consequences of rising trade exposure
AU - Autor, David
AU - Dorn, David
AU - Hanson, Gordon
AU - Majlesi, Kaveh
N1 - Funding Information:
*Autor: MIT Department of Economics and NBER (email: [email protected]); Dorn: University of Zurich and CEPR (email: [email protected]); Hanson: Harvard Kennedy School and NBER (email: gordon_hanson@ hks.harvard.edu); Majlesi: Lund University, Monash University, and CEPR (email: [email protected]). Stefano DellaVigna was the coeditor for this article. We are grateful to Stephan Haggard, Elhanan Helpman, Gary Jacobson, Nolan McCarty, John McLaren, and Zoli Hajnal for comments and Robert Anderson, Brandon Enriquez, Ante Malenica, Jacopo Orlandi, Evan Soltas, Michael Wong, and Alexander Workman for excellent research assistance. We are grateful to the NBER-Nielsen Media Project, and to Tanner Baldridge, Daniel Feenberg, and Andrew Sweeting for providing access to and support with Nielsen Media data. We thank the Pew Research Center, and Aaron Smith and Samantha Smith, for providing access to Pew survey microdata. The interpretations and views expressed here are those of the authors and not meant to reflect those of the Pew Research Center. We acknowledge funding from the Russell Sage Foundation (RSF-85-12-07), the National Science Foundation (SES-1227334), the Swiss National Science Foundation (BSSGI0-155804 and CRSII1-154446), Accenture LLP, the Andrew Carnegie Fellows Program, the Center on Global Transformation at UC San Diego, the IBM Global Universities Program, Schmidt Sciences, and the Smith Richardson Foundation.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Economic Association. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/10
Y1 - 2020/10
N2 - Has rising import competition contributed to the polarization of US politics? Analyzing multiple measures of political expression and results of congressional and presidential elections spanning the period 2000 through 2016, we find strong though not definitive evidence of an ideological realignment in trade- exposed local labor markets that commences prior to the divisive 2016 US presidential election. Exploiting the exogenous component of rising import competition by China, we find that trade exposed electoral districts simultaneously exhibit growing ideological polarization in some domains, meaning expanding support for both strong- left and strong- right views, and pure rightward shifts in others. Specifically, trade- impacted commuting zones or districts saw an increasing market share for the Fox News channel (a rightward shift), stronger ideological polarization in campaign contributions (a polarized shift), and a relative rise in the likelihood of electing a Republican to Congress (a rightward shift). Trade- exposed counties with an initial majority White population became more likely to elect a GOP conservative, while trade- exposed counties with an initial majority- minority population became more likely to elect a liberal Democrat, where in both sets of counties, these gains came at the expense of moderate Democrats (a polarized shift). In presidential elections, counties with greater trade exposure shifted toward the Republican candidate (a rightward shift). These results broadly support an emerging political economy literature that connects adverse economic shocks to sharp ideological realignments that cleave along racial and ethnic lines and induce discrete shifts in political preferences and economic policy.
AB - Has rising import competition contributed to the polarization of US politics? Analyzing multiple measures of political expression and results of congressional and presidential elections spanning the period 2000 through 2016, we find strong though not definitive evidence of an ideological realignment in trade- exposed local labor markets that commences prior to the divisive 2016 US presidential election. Exploiting the exogenous component of rising import competition by China, we find that trade exposed electoral districts simultaneously exhibit growing ideological polarization in some domains, meaning expanding support for both strong- left and strong- right views, and pure rightward shifts in others. Specifically, trade- impacted commuting zones or districts saw an increasing market share for the Fox News channel (a rightward shift), stronger ideological polarization in campaign contributions (a polarized shift), and a relative rise in the likelihood of electing a Republican to Congress (a rightward shift). Trade- exposed counties with an initial majority White population became more likely to elect a GOP conservative, while trade- exposed counties with an initial majority- minority population became more likely to elect a liberal Democrat, where in both sets of counties, these gains came at the expense of moderate Democrats (a polarized shift). In presidential elections, counties with greater trade exposure shifted toward the Republican candidate (a rightward shift). These results broadly support an emerging political economy literature that connects adverse economic shocks to sharp ideological realignments that cleave along racial and ethnic lines and induce discrete shifts in political preferences and economic policy.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85092226110&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1257/aer.20170011
DO - 10.1257/aer.20170011
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85092226110
SN - 0002-8282
VL - 110
SP - 3139
EP - 3183
JO - American Economic Review
JF - American Economic Review
IS - 10
ER -