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Douglas A. Irwin, Randall S. Kroszner
NBER Working Paper No. 5510*
Issued in March 1996
NBER Program(s): ITI
DAE
---- Abstract -----
We analyze Senate roll-call votes concerning tariffs on specific goods in order to understand the economic and political factors influencing the passage of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930. Contrary to recent studies emphasizing the partisan nature of the Congressional votes, our reading of the debates in the Congressional Record suggests that the final, party-line voting masks a rich vote- trading dynamic. We estimate a logit model of specific tariff votes that permits us to identify (a) important influences of specific producer beneficiaries in each Senator's constituency and (b) log- rolling coalitions among Senators with otherwise unrelated constituency interests which succeeded in raising tariff rates.
*Published: Carnegie-Rochester Series in Public Policy, Vol. 45 (December 1996): 173-200.
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