Abstract

AbstractIs the decline in voter turnout an indicator of a worse health of a representative democracy? We build a simple probabilistic‐voting model with endogenous turnout to address this question. We find that a lower turnout caused by a higher cost of voting implies higher political rents. Contrarily, a lower turnout caused by a higher ideological mobility of voters or by a lower expressive benefit of voting implies lower political rents. If voters have a civic‐duty motive to vote that depends on the level of rents, multiple equilibria (a high‐rents low‐turnout and a low‐rents high‐turnout) arise.

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