Political Power and Mortality: Heterogeneous Effects of the U.S. Voting Rights Act
By: Atheendar Venkataramani , Rourke O'Brien , Elizabeth Bair and more
Potential Business Impact:
Voting rights saved children's lives, but stressed some adults.
We study the health consequences of redistributing political power through the 1975 extension of the Voting Rights Act, which eliminated barriers to voting for previously disenfranchised nonwhite populations. The intervention led to broad declines in under-five mortality but sharply contrasting effects in other age groups: mortality fell among non-white children, younger adults, and older women, yet rose among whites and older non-white men. These differences cannot be reconciled by changes in population composition or material conditions. Instead, we present evidence suggesting psychosocial stress and retaliatory responses arising from perceived status threat as key mechanisms.
Similar Papers
Election and Subjective Well-Being:Evidence from the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election
General Economics
Election results hurt some people's happiness.
One Person, How Many Votes? Demographic Distortions in United States Elections
Applications
Shows how votes are unfairly counted.
Gerrymandering and geographic polarization have reduced electoral competition
Applications
Changes in voting maps make elections less fair.