The Politics of Economic Leadership: The Causes and Consequences of Presidential Rhetoric
By (Author) B. Dan Wood
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
12th November 2007
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Political leaders and leadership
338.973
Paperback
232
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
312g
The American president is widely viewed by the public and media as the nation's single most influential political and economic figure. But social scientists have often concluded that presidential words fall "on deaf ears" or have little lasting impact on policy or public opinion. Then why did Bill Clinton make 12,798 public references to the economy during his eight years in office compared with Harry Truman's mere 2,124 during his own two terms Why George W. Bush's 3,351 remarks during his first term Did all these words matter The Politics of Economic Leadership is the first comprehensive effort to examine when, why, and how presidents talk about the economy, as well as whether the president's economic rhetoric matters. It demonstrates conclusively that such presidential words do matter. Using an unprecedented compendium of every known unique statement by U.S. presidents about the economy from World War II through the first George W. Bush administration, Dan Wood measures the relative intensity and optimism of presidents' economic rhetoric.His pathbreaking statistical analysis shows that presidential words can affect everything from approval of the president's job performance to perceptions of economic news, consumer confidence, consumer behavior, business investment, and interest rates. The impacts are both immediate and gradual. Ultimately, Wood concludes, rhetoric is indeed a tool of presidential leadership that can be used unilaterally to affect a range of political and economic outcomes.
"The book is appropriate for graduate seminars on the presidency and for quantitative methods courses that wish to include strong examples of PAR and VAR models. More generally, it should prove to be a resource for presidency, political psychology, and public opinion scholars wishing to unpack the direct and indirect causal relationships that the book identifies."--William D. Anderson, Presidential Studies Quarterly
B. Dan Wood is professor of political science at Texas A&M University and the coauthor of "Bureaucratic Dynamics: The Role of Bureaucracy in a Democracy".