11 Apr '25
Economics Seminars | Friday Victoria Barone, University of Notre Dame

Victoria Barone, from University of Notre Dame, will present "Republican Support and Economic Hardship: The Enduring Effects of the Opioid Epidemic.”

Abstract

In this paper we establish a causal connection between two of the most salient social developments in the United States over the past decades: the opioid epidemic and the rise in partisanship and polarization. Drawing on unsealed records from litigation against Purdue Pharma, we uncover rich geographic variation in the marketing of prescription opioids that serves as a quasi-exogenous source of exposure to the epidemic. We use this variation to document significant increases in drug-related mortality and greater reliance on public transfer programs. This induced economic hardship led to substantial changes in the political landscape of those communities most affected by the opioid epidemic. We estimate that from the mid-2000s to 2020, exposure to the opioid epidemic continuously increased the Republican vote share in House, presidential, and gubernatorial elections. By the 2020 House elections, a one-standard-deviation increase in our measure of exposure led to a 4.6 percentage point increase in the Republican vote share. This higher vote share in the House translated into Republicans winning additional seats from 2012 until 2020.

Victoria Barone, University of Notre Dame
  • From 11 April 2025 2:00 AM
  • To 11 April 2025 3:30 AM
  • Location TBC
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