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Anyone for Higher Speed Limits? - Self-Interested and Adaptive Political Preferences

Abstract
Swedish survey-evidence indicates that variables reflecting self-interest are important in explaining people’s preferred speed limits, and that political preferences adapt to technological development. Drivers of cars that are newer (and hence safer), bigger, and with better high-speed characteristics, prefer higher speed limits, as do those who believe they drive better than average, whereas elderly people prefer lower limits. Furthermore, people report that they themselves vote more sociotropically than they believe others to vote, on average. Self-serving biases are proposed as a bridge between subjectively perceived expressive and sociotropic voting behavior, versus objectively self-interested voting behavior.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/2829
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  • Working papers
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gunwpe0095.pdf (160.8Kb)
Date
2003
Author
Martinsson, Peter
Johansson-Stenman, Olof
Keywords
Speed limits; self-interested voting; expressive voting; sociotropic voting; selfserving bias
adaptive political preferences
Publication type
Report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics, nr 95
Language
en
Metadata
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