No Kin in the Game: Moral Hazard and War in the US Congress

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Abstract

We study agency frictions in the US Congress. We examine the long-standing hypothesis that political elites engage in conflict because they fail to internalize the associated costs. We compare the voting behavior of legislators with draft age sons versus draft age daughters during the conscription-era wars of the twentieth century. We estimate that having a draft age son reduces proconscription voting by 7–11 percentage points. Support for conscription recovers when a legislator’s son ages out of eligibility. We establish that agency problems contribute to political conflict and that politicians are influenced by private incentives or-thogonal to political concerns or ideological preferences.

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McGuirk, E. F., Hilger, N., & Miller, N. (2023). No Kin in the Game: Moral Hazard and War in the US Congress. Journal of Political Economy, 131(9), 2370–2401. https://doi.org/10.1086/724316

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