Séminaire

The Optimal Design of Student Financial Aid

Pauline Grosjean (University of New South Wales Australian School of Business)

31 mars 2016, 11h00–12h30

Toulouse

Salle MF 323

Development Economics Seminar

Résumé

Data from the first post-Arab Spring elections reveal that support for Islamic parties came from richer districts and individuals. We develop a theory of political support for religious parties that explains this phenomenon. We predict that the probability that a voter supports a religious party (i) increases in income for the poorest voters, but decreases in income for the richest; and (ii) is greater for voters in richer districts. We test these predictions on original micro-level data in a nationally representative sample of 600 individuals in 30 districts in Tunisia. Our empirical results confirm both predictions and suggest that belonging to the middle class and living in a richer district together affect voting decisions more than being a religious voter. We document similar patterns in other key elections in the Muslim world.