by Mauro Caselli, Andrea Fracasso, Silvio Traverso

We study whether and to what extent the electoral dynamics in Italy over the 1994-2008 period can be explained by the development of economic factors associated with globalization. To measure the level of exposure to globalization for local labor markets, our main unit of analysis, we use the intensity of import competition from China and the presence of immigrants. Looking at parties’ political positions and employing an estimation strategy that accounts for endogeneity and time-invariant unobserved e↵ects across local labor markets, we find that both immigration intensity and exposure to import competition from China have contributed positively to the electoral outcomes of far-right parties, whereas only the former has produced a positive e↵ect on the votes of right-wing and traditionalist/authoritarian/nationalist parties. On the other hand, neither of them has had an e↵ect on far-left parties. Moreover, electoral turnout has responded negatively to an increased presence of migrants. While the above e↵ects seem to work through the mediation of labor markets, the results suggest that other mechanisms at the level of local communities are also at play. Keywords: voting, electoral outcomes, trade, import competition, immigration, local labor markets.

JEL Classification Codes: D72, F14, F60.

(published on Economics & Politics, 32, 68-103: https://doi.org/10.1111/ecpo.12147)

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