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Electoral Dividends from Programmatic Policies: A Theoretical Proposal Based on the Brazilian Case * * This article benefited from the discussions held at the 43 Annual Meeting of Anpocs and the 1 Political Studies Conference at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul. I appreciate the comments and suggestions of the anonymous BPSR reviewers and those of Felipe Zorzi, Gabriel Madeira, Glauco Peres, Gustavo Grohmann, Jairo Pimentel, Leonardo Barone, Lilian Sendretti, Maria Clara Oliveira, Maurício Moya, Natália Bueno, Paulo Peres, Pedro Vicente de Castro, and Vitor Vasquez

Recent controversies in the literature on the electoral effects of cash transfer programs reveal the limitations of traditional models associating public policies to voting. Why would beneficiaries reward parties for programmatic policies when the government has no control over the distribution of the benefits? Are they guided by short-term retrospective voting in favor of the incumbent without forming durable links? By studying the Brazilian case, based on the Bolsa Escola-Program, formulated by the PSDB, and the Bolsa-Família Program, formulated by the PT, I test different theories and propose an alternative approach. My thesis is that the long-term electoral effect of programmatic policies is a consequence of credit-claiming efforts made by the competing parties, resulting in reciprocity from voters. My argument is built on the examination of parliamentary deliberations throughout the formulation of these programs and on the analysis of public opinion surveys conducted in 2005, a transitional moment when there were beneficiaries of both programs, and in 2018, the year of the first presidential election with the Bolsa-Família Program being implemented with the PT as an opposition party. The data show that party leaders came to the defense of these social programs to varying degrees and in different moments of their terms in office and that these different mobilization strategies reflected on voting behavior.

Bolsa-Família Program; elections; cash transfer programs; parliamentary debates; public policies


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