articleThe Quarterly Journal of EconomicsJul 17, 2006Closed access

Television and Voter Turnout*

University of Chicago

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Abstract

I use variation across markets in the timing of television's introduction to identify its impact on voter turnout. The estimated effect is significantly negative, accounting for between a quarter and a half of the total decline in turnout since the 1950s. I argue that substitution away from other media with more political coverage provides a plausible mechanism linking television to voting. As evidence for this, I show that the entry of television in a market coincided with sharp drops in consumption of newspapers and radio, and in political knowledge as measured by election surveys. I also show that both the information and turnout effects were largest in off-year congressional elections, which receive…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Turnout
  • Newspaper
  • Voter turnout
  • Quarter (Canadian coin)
  • Voting
  • Consumption (sociology)
  • Economics
  • Advertising
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