Available Formats
Economic Actors, Economic Behaviors, and Presidential Leadership: The Constrained Effects of Rhetoric
By (Author) C. Damien Arthur
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
2nd August 2016
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political leaders and leadership
330.973
Paperback
166
Width 154mm, Height 225mm, Spine 13mm
272g
There is considerable disagreement about whether the U.S. president has a direct and measurable influence over the economy. The analysis presented in Economic Actors, Economic Behaviors, and Presidential Leadership: The Constrained Effects of Rhetoric suggests that while presidents have increased their rhetoric regarding the economy, they have not had much success in shaping it. Considering this research, Arthur argues that the presidents decision to address the economy so often must stem from a symbolic placation or institutional necessity that is intended to comfort constituencies or somehow garner electoral advocacy from the partys base. No other viable explanation exists given the lack of results presidents obtain from discussing the economy and their persistent determination to do so. This discrepancy suggests that presidential rhetoric on the economy is, at best, a tool used to appear concerned to everyone and toe the party-line to their base. Arthur presents an overview of economic rhetoric from the presidential office that will be of interest to scholars of the economy and political communication.
This work provides empirical evidence to support what many have long suspected: that presidential talks about the economy are just talk. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate, graduate, and research collections. * CHOICE *
[T]his book contributes meaningfully to our growing, if bifurcated, understanding of why and how presidents communicate with their public and what the consequences of these efforts may be. Scholars who have invested time in this debate would do well to read Arthurs words carefully, and those seeking to learn more in general about presidential rhetoric and presidential economic leadership will fnd Economic Actors, Economic Behaviors, and Presidential Leadership to be as enjoyable of an introduction to the topic as it is an insightful one. * Rhetoric & Public Affairs *
Using the presidents rhetoric on the national economy as an analytic wedge, this nicely written study adds to our understanding of the role presidential rhetoric playsand fails to playin influencing policy making and policy makers. C. Damien Arthurs book will be of particular interest to students and scholars with an interest in economic policy, presidential rhetoric, and the ways in which they intersect. -- Mary E. Stuckey, Georgia State University
C. Damien Arthurs Economic Actors, Economic Behaviors, and Presidential Leadership takes a skeptical and data-driven look at a major question for scholars of the presidency: does presidential rhetoric matter, and if so, how The book is sure to be of interest to students of presidential rhetoric. -- Thomas W. Benson, Pennsylvania State University
C. Damien Arthur is assistant professor of political science at West Virginia State University.