We use data from Canadian legislatures to examine how legislative pension rules affect the propensity of incumbents to seek re-election. We predict that legislators with defined-benefits pensions are more likely to seek re-election than legislators without pensions. Once the legislator is vested (i.e., qualified) in the pension, however, this incentive disappears; indeed, pensions that accrue value quickly and can be collected at an early age, induce legislators to retire rather than seek re-election. Difference-in-differences estimates bear out these predictions: on average, legislators with defined benefits pensions are 11 percentage points more likely to seek re-election than legislators without pensions, whereas legislators who on vesting immediately qualify for a pension of 50% of their salary are 11 percentage points less likely to do so. These results show that legislative pensions alter the value that legislators place on re-election and, in doing so, they affect the accumulation of legislative professionalism and the strength of democratic accountability.
CITATION STYLE
Burzo, S., Kramer, B., Irwin, D., & Kam, C. (2024). Legislative Pensions and Re-election Seeking: Evidence from Canadian Legislatures. Legislative Studies Quarterly, 49(2), 383–409. https://doi.org/10.1111/lsq.12424
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