Autori
Sacchi, AgneseLo Prete, AnnaTitolo
Government Spending and Civic Engagement: Exploring the Role of Civil Society Participation and Voting in 28 DemocraciesPeriodico
Università degli studi di Torino. Dip. Di Economia e Statistica Cognetti de Martiis. Working paper seriesAnno:
2025 - Volume:
10 - Fascicolo:
13 - Pagina iniziale:
1 - Pagina finale:
54This study offers causal evidence on how distinct forms of civic engagement affect
government spending across 28 democracies between 2000 and 2024. Its main innovation
lies in disentangling the fiscal effects of two channels of engagement—civil society
participation and electoral turnout—through an original identification strategy that exploits
exogenous variation in collective versus self-interested motives. Our findings reveal that
civic engagement exerts distinct effects on public spending depending on the channel
through which citizens participate in democratic life. On the one hand, stronger
participation in civil society associations leads to higher government spending, consistent
with a publicly spirited and collective mobilization effect. On the other hand, greater
electoral participation is associated with lower public expenditure, as more collectiveinterested
individuals distance themselves from the traditional electoral channel, and more
self-interested individuals ask for less public spending. We explore these underlying
mechanisms, propose strategies to address key identification challenges, and further
consider the impact of public spending on environmental protection and green politics
dynamics.
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