非市场力量
杠杆(统计)
政治
航空
立法机关
反事实思维
业务
进入壁垒
营销
经济
公共经济学
市场结构
财务
市场经济
产业组织
政治学
法学
要素市场
机器学习
计算机科学
哲学
工程类
认识论
航空航天工程
作者
Min‐Seok Pang,Russell J. Funk,Daniel Hirschman
标识
DOI:10.31235/osf.io/7xvd3
摘要
The literature on corporate political activity (CPA) generally views nonmarket actions aimed at influencing political actors (e.g., lobbying or campaign contributions) as related but separate activities from market actions. This study demonstrates how firms’ core market actions (e.g., market entry or geographic expansion) can function as CPA. We theorize two mechanisms through which firms leverage market actions as CPA: “pork” (i.e., ones that primarily benefit a politician’s constituents) and “perk” (i.e., ones that directly benefit the politician). We document these mechanisms through an empirical analysis of data from the U.S. airline industry in 1990-2019. Specifically, we find that airlines increase the supply of flights from the airports in the home district of the Chair of the Transportation Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives (pork). We also find that the airlines increase the supply of nonstop flights to Washington, D.C. from the Chair’s district (perk). We use counterfactual estimation methods and exogenous turnovers in committee leadership to provide causal evidence. Moreover, the observed increase in flight supplies is negatively associated with formal policy changes in Congress, and with text mining techniques, we find that this effect is stronger for bills related to aviation safety and security. We contribute to the literature on CPA by demonstrating a blurred boundary between market and nonmarket actions, which help explain firms’ competitive actions that cannot be explained by market considerations alone.
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