Democratic Processes and Financial Markets

Pricing Politics

William Bernhard author David Leblang author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:24th Jul '06

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Democratic Processes and Financial Markets cover

Shows how elections, cabinet formations, and government dissolutions affect asset markets.

Examines the conditions under which democratic events, including elections, cabinet formations, and government dissolutions, affect asset markets. Where these events have less predictable outcomes, market returns are depressed and volatility increases. To measure the predictability of political outcomes, the authors employ sophisticated models of the political process from political science.The authors examine the conditions under which democratic events, including elections, cabinet formations, and government dissolutions, affect asset markets. Where these events have less predictable outcomes, market returns are depressed and volatility increases. In contrast, where market actors can forecast the result, returns do not exhibit any unusual behavior. Further, political expectations condition how markets respond to the political process. When news causes market actors to update their political beliefs, market actors reallocate their portfolios, and overall market behavior changes. To measure political information, Professors Bernhard and Leblang employ sophisticated models of the political process. They draw on a variety of models of market behavior, including the efficient markets hypothesis, capital asset pricing model, and arbitrage pricing theory, to trace the impact of political events on currency, stock, and bond markets. The analysis will appeal to academics, graduate students, and advanced undergraduates across political science, economics, and finance.

'… combination of single case studies with broader cross-country analyses … not only provide the ground for … future research, but also are a great starting point for students of political economy that have not yet been exposed to research in this area.' Swiss Political Science Review

ISBN: 9780521678384

Dimensions: 229mm x 153mm x 15mm

Weight: 374g

272 pages