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Federal Spending in Red and Blue States

- April 6, 2010

Monkey Cage reader Ken Wedding forwarded me this post at The Economist, which piggybacks on Jeff Frankel’s post noting that states where majorities voted for McCain in 2008 received more federal spending per tax dollar in 2005 than did states where majorities voted for Obama. I re-did Frankel’s graph to rely on the actual spending per dollar rather than the state’s rankings, as Frankel did. (For more on why rankings are flawed, see here.)

spendingandvote.png

The question is what this graph tells us, if anything. Here is The Economist:

bq. This leads to situations where states that absorb huge amount of government aid (particularly for agriculture) are hotbeds of Tea Party activity, where voters decry the heavy boot of the federal government on their backs. It’s tempting to make this a huge gotcha point and slam Tea Partiers for cognitive dissonance, but the holding of conflicting beliefs is one of America’s deepest and most common traditions.

And so we add another chapter in this blog’s history of pointing out the ecological fallacy. Once again: from aggregate data, we have absolutely no evidence of whether any individual — whether a Tea Party supporter or not — holds “conflicting beliefs.” Perhaps the vast majority of residents of these states have entirely consonant beliefs: they supported McCain and oppose spending, or support both Obama and spending.

No one is revealed as a hypocrite by this sort of analysis.