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2016 | alle anzeigen zurück zur Übersicht aller Publikationen Stadelmann, David, Thomas, Tobias, Zakharov, NikitaToo hot to play it cool? Temperature and negative media bias 2025 Public Choice » Kurzfassung anzeigen « Kurzfassung verbergen Kurzfassung This paper examines the impact of outdoor temperature on media bias in a quasi-experimental setting. We take advantage of the geographical proximity of the locations of the three major US news networks, ABC News, CBS News, and NBC News, all headquartered in New York City, and granular variations in local daily temperatures. We use more than 10 years of daily hand-coded data on the tonality of evening weekday news broadcasts by each news network to estimate the effect of hot weather on negative media bias in reporting the news affiliated with the Republican and Democratic parties, controlling for time and network-month fixed effects. In line with theoretical expectations regarding human behavior, our results suggest an increase in negative media bias: a 0.5 °C (0.9 °F) increment in daily maximum temperature on a hot day (> 25 °C or > 77 °F) leads to about a 10% increase in the negative bias measured as the difference in the share of negative news about the Republicans and the Democrats. This effect is mainly driven by an increase of the share of negative news about the Republicans. This bias in political reporting exists only for maximum temperatures, as opposed to minimum or average temperatures. The results are robust to an array of placebo tests using past or future temperatures. Examining a similar effect for positive coverage bias, we detect precisely null effects, suggesting that high temperatures are associated only with biased negativity in reporting.
PDF-Datei herunterladen Dmitrii Kofanov, Vladimir Kozlov, Alexander Libman, Nikita ZakharovEncouraged to Cheat? Federal Incentives and Career Concerns at the Sub-national Level as Determinants of Under-Reporting of COVID-19 Mortality in Russia 2022 British Journal of Political Science , Seiten : 1 - 26» Kurzfassung anzeigen « Kurzfassung verbergen Kurzfassung This article investigates the determinants and consequences of manipulating COVID-19 statistics in an authoritarian federation using the Russian case. It abandons the interpretation of the authoritarian regime as a unitary actor and acknowledges the need to account for a complex interaction of various bureaucratic and political players to understand the spread and the logic of manipulation. Our estimation strategy takes advantage of a natural experiment where the onset of the pandemic adjourned the national referendum enabling new presidential terms for Putin. To implement the rescheduled referendum, Putin needed sub-national elites to manufacture favourable COVID-19 statistics to convince the public that the pandemic was under control. While virtually all regions engaged in data manipulation, there was a substantial variation in the degree of misreporting. A third of this variation can be explained by an asynchronous schedule of regional governors’ elections, winning which depends almost exclusively on support from the federal authorities.
Datei herunterladen Zakharov, Nikita, Alexeev, MichaelWho profits from windfalls in oil tax revenue? Inequality, protests, and the role of corruption 2022 Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization , Band : 197, Seiten : 472 - 492» Kurzfassung anzeigen « Kurzfassung verbergen Kurzfassung We investigate the relationship between oil windfalls and income inequality using the subnational data of one of the resource-richest and highly unequal countries in the world – Russia. While previous literature produced contradictory findings due to the use of an aggregate measure of oil rents mainly in cross-national settings, we focus exclusively on oil rents that accrue to the subnational governments across one country. Our estimation strategy takes advantage of the two specific features of Russian oil taxation: 1) the policy change when sharing oil extraction taxes with local budgets was discontinued; and 2) the oil tax formula being tied directly to the international oil prices making oil price shocks an exogenous measure of change in oil rents. When we look at the period with oil tax revenues shared with the regional governments, we find that oil windfalls had increased income inequality and benefited the wealthiest quintile of the population in regions with more intense rent-seeking. Further, positive oil price shocks combined with greater rent-seeking reduced the share of labor income but increased the income share from unidentified sources traditionally associated with corruption. These effects of oil windfalls disappeared after the Russian government discontinued oil tax revenue sharing with regional governments. Finally, we examine some political implications of rising inequality due to the appropriation of oil windfalls. We find a positive effect of rising inequality on the frequency of protests associated with grievances among the poor and disadvantaged social groups; this effect, however, exists only in relatively democratic regions.
Datei herunterladen Zakharov, NikitaAsymmetric Oil Price Shocks, Tax Revenues, and the Resource Curse 2020 Economic Letters , Band : 186» Kurzfassung anzeigen « Kurzfassung verbergen Kurzfassung The paper proposes an asymmetric relationship between oil rents and institutions such that only positive oil windfalls adversely affect institutional quality, and negative oil windfalls have no impact. We test this theory empirically by studying the dynamics of institutional quality in Russian regions. We find that increases in tax revenues caused by exogenous positive oil price shocks do not change regional income but increase corruption and reduce regional democracy and governance quality; declines in tax revenues from negative oil price shocks do not affect institutional quality but decrease regional income. Zakharov, NikitaDoes corruption hinder investment? Evidence from Russian regions 2019 Eur J Polit Econ , Band : 56, Seiten : 39 - 61 Schulze, Günther G., Sjahrir, Bambang S., Zakharov, NikitaCorruption in Russia 2016 J Law Econ , Band : 59, Nummer : 1, Seiten : 135 - 171
Buchbeiträge Jahre: 2018 | alle anzeigen zurück zur Übersicht aller Publikationen Schulze, Günther G., Zakharov, NikitaCorruption in Russia In : Handbook on the Geographies of Corruption 2018, Edward Elgar , Barney Warf, Seiten : 195 - 212, Barney Warf, ISBN : 9781786434746
Sonstige Publikationen Jahre: 2025 |
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2013 | alle anzeigen zurück zur Übersicht aller Publikationen Zakharov, Nikita, Zarbailova, DianaCan't Buy Me Love? Cash Transfers and Support for an Autocrat SSRN , Seiten : 1 - 30, 2025 Schulze, Günther G., Zakharov, NikitaPolitical Cycles of Media Repression IEP Discussion Paper Series, University of Freiburg , Nummer : 52, Seiten : 1 - 38, 2025 Ball, Joshua, Schulze, Günther G., Zakharov, NikitaAin’t no Silver Bullet? Gun Laws and Suicide in the US IEP Discussion Paper Series, University of Freiburg , Nummer : 51, Seiten : 1 - 20, 2024 Jomni, Hana, Zakharov, NikitaDo Terrorist Attacks Polarize Politicians? Evidence from the European Parliamentary Speeches on Migration IEP Discussion Paper Series, University of Freiburg , Nummer : 50, 2024 Zakharov, NikitaThe Art of Data Manipulation in Russia: Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic Russian Analytical Digest , Band : 314, Seiten : 13 - 20, 2024 Rey, Ramón, Schulze, Günther G., Zakharov, NikitaTransit Migration and Crime: Evidence from Colombia IEP Discussion Paper Series, University of Freiburg , Nummer : 44, 2024 Rochlitz, Michael, Schoors, Koen J. L., Zakharov, NikitaCan Authoritarian Propaganda Compete with the Opposition on Social Media? Experimental Evidence from Russia. SSRN Working Paper , Band : 4433145, 2023 Schulze, Günther G., Zakharov, NikitaPolitical Cycles of Media Repression BOFIT Discussion Papers , Band : 3, 2023 Kozlov, Vladimir, Kofanov, Dmitrii, Zakharov, NikitaThe Effect of COVID-19 Cash Transfers on Health and Well-being of Adolescents:
Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Russia
SSRN Working Papers , Band : 4411663, 2023 Enikolopov, Ruben, Rochlitz, Michael, Schoors, Koen J. L., Zakharov, NikitaThe Effect of Independent Online Media in an Autocracy SSRN , 2022 Alexeev, Michael, Zakharov, NikitaWho Profits from Windfalls in Oil Tax Revenue? Inequality, Protests, and the Role of Corruption CAEPR Working Paper Series , Band : 2021, Nummer : 004, Seiten : 1 - 45, 2021 Kofanov, Dmitrii, Kozlov, Vladimir, Libman, Alexander, Zakharov, NikitaEncouraged to Cheat? Federal Incentives, Career Concerns, and Local Freedom of Press as Determinants of Under-Reporting of COVID-19 Mortality at the Sub-National Level SSRN eLibrary , Band : 2020, Seiten : 1 - 35, 2020 Schulze, Günther G., Zakharov, NikitaCorruption in Russia - Historic Legacy and Systemic Nature CESifo Working Paper , Nummer : 6864, 2018 Zakharov, NikitaDoes Corruption Hinder Investment? Evidence from Russian Regions IEP Discussion Paper Series, University of Freiburg , Nummer : 33, 2017 Schulze, Günther G., Sjahrir, Bambang S., Zakharov, NikitaCorruption in Russia
IEP Discussion Paper Series, University of Freiburg , Nummer : 22, 2013 Credits: SILK Icons by http://www.famfamfam.com/lab/icons/silk/