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Endogenous Benchmarking and Government Accountability: Experimental Evidence from the COVID-19 Pandemic

Publication ,  Journal Article
Becher, M; Brouard, S; Stegmueller, D
Published in: British Journal of Political Science
April 23, 2024

When do cross-national comparisons enable citizens to hold governments accountable? According to recent work in comparative politics, benchmarking across borders is a powerful mechanism for making elections work. However, little attention has been paid to the choice of benchmarks and how they shape democratic accountability. We extend existing theories to account for endogenous benchmarking. Using the COVID-19 pandemic as a test case, we embedded experiments capturing self-selection and exogenous exposure to benchmark information from representative surveys in France, Germany, and the UK. The experiments reveal that when individuals have the choice, they are likely to seek out congruent information in line with their prior view of the government. Moreover, going beyond existing experiments on motivated reasoning and biased information choice, endogenous benchmarking occurs in all three countries despite the absence of partisan labels. Altogether, our results suggest that endogenous benchmarking weakens the democratic benefits of comparisons across borders.

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Published In

British Journal of Political Science

DOI

EISSN

1469-2112

ISSN

0007-1234

Publication Date

April 23, 2024

Volume

54

Issue

2

Start / End Page

355 / 372

Related Subject Headings

  • Political Science & Public Administration
  • 4408 Political science
  • 4407 Policy and administration
  • 1606 Political Science
  • 1605 Policy and Administration
 

Citation

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Becher, M., Brouard, S., & Stegmueller, D. (2024). Endogenous Benchmarking and Government Accountability: Experimental Evidence from the COVID-19 Pandemic. British Journal of Political Science, 54(2), 355–372. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123423000170
Becher, M., S. Brouard, and D. Stegmueller. “Endogenous Benchmarking and Government Accountability: Experimental Evidence from the COVID-19 Pandemic.” British Journal of Political Science 54, no. 2 (April 23, 2024): 355–72. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123423000170.
Becher M, Brouard S, Stegmueller D. Endogenous Benchmarking and Government Accountability: Experimental Evidence from the COVID-19 Pandemic. British Journal of Political Science. 2024 Apr 23;54(2):355–72.
Becher, M., et al. “Endogenous Benchmarking and Government Accountability: Experimental Evidence from the COVID-19 Pandemic.” British Journal of Political Science, vol. 54, no. 2, Apr. 2024, pp. 355–72. Scopus, doi:10.1017/S0007123423000170.
Becher M, Brouard S, Stegmueller D. Endogenous Benchmarking and Government Accountability: Experimental Evidence from the COVID-19 Pandemic. British Journal of Political Science. 2024 Apr 23;54(2):355–372.
Journal cover image

Published In

British Journal of Political Science

DOI

EISSN

1469-2112

ISSN

0007-1234

Publication Date

April 23, 2024

Volume

54

Issue

2

Start / End Page

355 / 372

Related Subject Headings

  • Political Science & Public Administration
  • 4408 Political science
  • 4407 Policy and administration
  • 1606 Political Science
  • 1605 Policy and Administration