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WORKING PAPER
Explaining the Gender Gap in U.S. Presidential Elections, 1980-1992
Alvarez, R. Michael
Chaney, Carole
Nagler, Jonathan
Abstract
This paper compares the voting behavior of women and men in
presidential elections since 1980 to test competing explanations for
the gender gap. We show that, consistent with prior research on
individual elections, women placed more emphasis on the national
economy than men, and men placed more emphasis on pocketbook voting
than women. We add evidence showing that women have consistently more
negative assessments of the economy than do men, suggesting that a
part of what has been considered a Republican-Democratic gender gap is
really an anti-incumbent bias on the part of women. Our multivariate
analysis demonstrates that neither the differences between men
and women's preferences nor emphasis on any single issue explains the
significant gender gap in vote choice; but that a combination of
respondent views on the economy, social programs, military action,
abortion, and ideology can consistently explain at least three-fourths
of the gender gap in the 1984, 1988, and 1992 elections. We also clarify the
interpretation of partisan identification in explaining the gender
gap.
Keywords
economic evaluations gender gap general-extreme value model issue voting presidential elections
File
Uploaded
08-22-1996
Document ID Number
371
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