My (Running) Mate, the Mayor: Political Ties and Access to Public Jobs in Ecuador

Working papers in socioeconomic research

My (Running) Mate, the Mayor: Political Ties and Access to Public Jobs in Ecuador

Publication date: 2020-01-17

Authors: Brassiolo, Pablo ; Estrada, Ricardo ; Fajardo, Gustavo

We show that local politicians’ probability of being employed by a municipality increases when they have a strong party connection to its mayor. Using a regression discontinuity design, we compare the employment outcomes of individuals connected to the winner vis-à-vis those connected to the runner-up in close mayoral races in Ecuador. Among candidates to local councils who lose their bid, the probability of getting a job in the municipality increases tenfold when their own party’s mayoral nominee is elected. Importantly, the effect is concentrated among low-ranking positions, which reveals that this is the result of political patronage.

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Technical sheet

Language: en

Country / Region: Latin America, Ecuador

Format: pdf

Cite publication

Brassiolo, Pablo; Estrada, Ricardo; Fajardo, Gustavo. (2020). My (Running) Mate, the Mayor: Political Ties and Access to Public Jobs in Ecuador. Caracas: CAF

Authors

Brassiolo, Pablo

No. of publications 36

Estrada, Ricardo

No. of publications 32

Fajardo, Gustavo

No. of publications 23

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