Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-5g6vh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T22:50:38.474Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Tycoon candidates, electoral strategies, and voter support: a survey experiment in South Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 March 2024

Mogens K. Justesen
Affiliation:
Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark
Stanislav Markus*
Affiliation:
University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208, USA
*
Corresponding author: Mogens K. Justesen; Email: mkj.egb@cbs.dk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Why do voters shun some business tycoons yet elect others into power? As structural conditions facilitate the entry of super-wealthy actors into politics, the differential electoral support across business elites suggests a puzzle. We conceptualize four mechanisms behind the popular support for “tycoon candidates”: competence signaling, framing, fame, and clientelism. To test their relative efficacy, we leverage an experiment embedded in a nationally representative survey in South Africa, an important developing democracy where certain tycoons are successfully running for office. We find that, across distinct electoral appeals by tycoon candidates, clientelism is particularly effective, especially for mobilizing support from the less affluent voters. Racial framing significantly decreases support among white voters. Meanwhile, tycoons’ competence signaling or fame do not help them at the ballot box. By identifying the micro-level underpinnings of voter support across tycoon candidates, our study contributes to the literatures on business and politics, voting behavior, and clientelism.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Vinod K. Aggarwal

Introduction

Across Africa and beyond, an increasing number of political candidates are (very) wealthy businesspeople.Footnote 1 Tycoons elected heads of state in recent decades range from Donald Trump and Silvio Berlusconi in Western democracies to Thaksin Shinawatra in Thailand, Petro Poroshenko in Ukraine, Patrice Talon in Benin, Sebastián Piñera in Chile, and Cyril Ramaphosa in South Africa. Countless others have been voted into subnational or legislative offices.

Existing research explores the structural conditions facilitating the political influence of big business as well as businesspeople’s incentives to run for office. Meanwhile, no analysis to-date examines voters’ receptiveness to distinct electoral strategies pursued by tycoon candidates, which is important for two reasons. First, scholarly analysis of tycoon candidates has lagged far behind their rising prominence and substantive importance. After all, power assumption by economic elites is consequential. Stark class differences between voters and their representatives skew economic policy away from voter preferences.Footnote 2 Second, their financial advantages notwithstanding, tycoon candidates also face unique electoral challenges. Data on inequality aversion and antipathy toward high-status groupsFootnote 3 suggests that voters approach tycoon candidates with skepticism. The material fortunes of the super-wealthy are often regarded as illegitimate by the respective populations.Footnote 4 Furthermore, in the era of populism, anti-elite campaigning increasingly resonates with voters around the world.

Still, some tycoon candidates are able to overcome these challenges, which generates our key theoretical question: why do voters support some tycoon candidates but not others? Indeed, as structural conditions, including inequality and the costs of campaign finance, increasingly prevent blue-collar candidates from running for office while also facilitating the political dominance of wealthy elites,Footnote 5 how voters choose between different super-wealthy candidates emerges as a critical—yet understudied—question.

We define “tycoon candidates” as super-wealthy business owners who run for office in popular elections. (For our purposes, “tycoons” is more apt than “oligarchs” as the latter term presupposes significant political influence.) While tycoon candidates run for office in both advanced and developing democracies, they tend to play a more prominent role in weakly institutionalized settings without effective constraints on money in politics.Footnote 6

To shed light on the micro-level underpinnings of differential voter support across tycoon candidates, we administered a preregistered experiment embedded in a nationally representative survey in South Africa—a country where tycoons are gaining office across diverse contexts ranging from the entire nation (president Ramaphosa) and the metropolis of Johannesburg (mayor Mashaba) to the small town of Greytown (mayor Mavundla) in the KwaZulu-Natal province, while also spanning tycoons who support the ANC and those in opposition.

Our goal is to test the relative efficacy of four possible mechanisms behind the differential electoral support across tycoon candidates in a developing democracy: competence signaling, racial framing, fame, and clientelism. In our survey experiment, respondents are primed with a particular mechanism while evaluating a hypothetical tycoon candidate. We find that clientelism is particularly effective, especially for mobilizing support from the less affluent voters. Racial framing matters too by—perhaps unexpectedly—decreasing tycoon support among white voters. Meanwhile, tycoons’ fame and media exposure, or signals of competence do not help them at the ballot box, contrary to well-established literatures.

We contribute to key macro-level accounts of democratic capture in the literature on business and politics by shifting focus to micro-level voter calculus and the associated tactics of individual tycoons. In other words, while existing work explains the supply of wealthy candidates, we investigate voters’ demand for such candidates, hence contributing to our understanding of the equilibrium between candidates and voters. We also advance the literature on voting behavior by analyzing heretofore neglected tycoon candidates. Furthermore, we develop the scholarship on clientelism by specifying why tycoon candidates may matter in clientelist exchange and by identifying the effect of their clientelist strategies on electoral support. Finally, by presenting evidence from a critical developing democracy in Africa, we extend the geographical scope of survey experiments on business and politics.

Theory: mechanisms of tycoon support

We build on two literatures. First, a voluminous literature on business and politics has theorized democratic capture by wealthy asset owners—a process facilitated by campaign finance rules, policy delegation to business, the cross-national competition for capital, tycoons’ personal connections, business platforms for collective action, or tycoons’ media ownership, among other factors.Footnote 7 In emphasizing such structural conditions, political scientists tend to conceptualize the involvement of business elites in government as “quiet politics”Footnote 8 or “stealth politics”Footnote 9 which avoid the limelight of elected office. Business scholars, while typically more interested in instrumental power, also emphasize the “concealment of corporate political activity.”Footnote 10 Yet while this foundational literature offers important insights, to the extent tycoons do contest popular elections, it also suggests an overlooked research agenda.

Second, an emerging literature explores business candidates in elections.Footnote 11 These studies generally do not distinguish between the super-wealthy tycoon candidates and the general representatives of “business” that may include small entrepreneurs. Besides, the focus here is on the candidates’ incentives to run for office, or on the benefits of office for associated firms.Footnote 12

Together, the path-breaking literatures on democratic capture and business candidates in elections recognize that politics is ever more dominated by wealthy elites in advanced and developing democracies alike. While such conditions enable the increasing participation of tycoon candidates in elections—cue Michael Bloomberg, Tom Steyer, and Donald Trump, three billionaires in the run-up to the 2020 US presidential elections, for example—they also beg the question about the comparative efficacy of the mechanisms allowing certain tycoon candidates to attract voters. To introduce this missing element, we conceptualize four such mechanisms below.

Competence signaling

Voters in democracies generally prefer competent candidates,Footnote 13 and candidates’ personal background can provide valuable information. Voters may infer, for example, that if a candidate built a prosperous business, she could successfully run a governmental administration too. Indeed, many candidates with private sector experience actively encourage such extrapolation of competence by stressing their business-derived but generally applicable skills, for example, the ability to manage problems on tight budgets, to negotiate with counterparties, to innovate and be entrepreneurial, etc.Footnote 14 While scholars have shown that business elites can use their narrow issue-based expertise to shape economic policies through lobbying,Footnote 15 we posit that tycoon candidates in particular can leverage their business accomplishments for electoral competence signaling. For example, Herman Mashaba, the former tycoon mayor of Johannesburg in South Africa, promised to “run Johannesburg like a business” during his campaign, elaborating that “politics and business are the same thing… The city needs to have the capacity and brain power to collect the [tax] money and… has… the responsibility to use this money efficiently, get value for it.”Footnote 16 Therefore, we expect that tycoon candidates who emphasize their business accomplishments will enjoy higher voter support relative to tycoon candidates who do not.

Racial framing

Tycoon politicians, especially in developing democracies, have a record of adopting self-enriching policies that economically harm their constituentsFootnote 17 : this could deter potential voters. Inequality aversion and antipathy toward high-status groupsFootnote 18 also suggest that extreme wealth can be a liability for candidates in terms of voter perceptions.

In this context, framing, which is a process through which “public preferences can be… manipulated”Footnote 19 by changing the presentation of the issue or its alternatives, may allow candidates to render their extreme wealth or tycoon status less salient for voters. When tycoon candidates campaign on issues other than the economic interests of their voters, these alternative non-economic issues can displace economic concerns as the most salient problems for the voters. In a dynamic observed across the globe, successful framing by political candidates along these lines may alter the key cleavage in the electorate from class-based toward cultural, partisan, racial, or other issues.Footnote 20 National context, in turn, determines which particular frame is salient to the voting public. Ukrainian tycoons, for example, have used resistance against the Russian aggression as a way to rally public support, while Thai tycoons have relied on the Buddhist religion to do the same.Footnote 21

As the most unequal country on the planetFootnote 22 , South Africa presents tycoons—who epitomize inequality—with an obvious electoral challenge. Framing might help tycoons to dissociate themselves from economic disparity. Given its troubled history of apartheid rule, racial justice provides the most potent political frame in South Africa.Footnote 23 In 2016, for example, a major public relations firm was hired to furtively stoke racial tensions so as to deflect blame for massive corruption toward white elites, away from the so-called “Zupta regime,” a joint state-capture effort by the former president Zuma (currently under arrest) and the multi-billion dollar corporate holding of the Gupta tycoons.Footnote 24 An observable implication of the racial framing mechanism is that tycoon candidates who portray themselves as advocates of racial justice should enjoy higher voter support compared to tycoon candidates who do not.

Fame

The affairs of the super-wealthy, and tycoons, in particular, often generate broad media coverage. Such quasi-celebrity status and fame may create higher levels of trust among voters, due to the legitimizing effects of extensive media coverage,Footnote 25 as compared to the less famous candidates.

The fame-based mechanism is distinct from “name recognition.” While name recognition may boost political support subconsciously (by serving as a subliminal cognitive shortcut for voters), fame largely operates via conscious and deliberate decision-making channelsFootnote 26 —which facilitates the testing of the fame mechanism in an experimental setting. Furthermore, it is fame per se, beyond popularity, that generates trust and legitimacy: that is, notoriety for “bad behavior” or scandals can also boost a candidate’s chances.Footnote 27

Overall, the imprint of fame has been shown to boost candidates’ chances.Footnote 28 Just like actors (e.g., Arnold Schwarzenegger, former governor of California) or sports stars (e.g., Manny Pacquiao, boxer and senator in the Philippines), tycoons can leverage their fame to run for political office. In South Africa, for example, Tokyo Sexwale (former head of government in the Gauteng province) is a tycoon whose fame and media coverage likely benefitted his campaigns according to local press. The previously mentioned tycoon candidate Mashaba also received broad media coverage due to his wealth, including being featured on the cover of Forbes Africa. Hence, we expect that tycoon candidates who are famous will enjoy higher voter support than tycoon candidates who are not.

Clientelism

While voters value economic performance, they may disregard any public policies from a candidate if she offers voters private rewards in exchange for political support.Footnote 29 Clientelism involves the instrumental exchange of political support for material benefits, for example, the provision of food to one’s village, access to government jobs, or simple cash hand-outs.

So far, there has been little theoretical integration of clientelistic mechanisms and the size of personal wealth of political candidates such as business tycoons. Still, these phenomena may be related for three reasons. First, if voters think that a candidate may pay for their votes out of her own pocket rather than by redirecting state resources, then the depth of that candidate’s pocket certainly matters. Thanks to their personal wealth, tycoon candidates may credibly promise to engage in clientelism. Second, clientelist distribution may serve as a signal of programmatic redistributive intent after the election.Footnote 30 This mechanism may work particularly well for tycoon candidates whom voters might not otherwise associate with progressive redistribution and pro-poor social policies. Finally, tycoon candidates are inevitably employers who can act as effective brokers in clientelistic exchange or, more directly, exchange jobs and work at local businesses for political support.Footnote 31 Whichever of these mechanisms is at play, tycoon candidates who use clientelistic distribution during elections should enjoy higher voter support than tycoon candidates who do not.

While clientelism in South Africa is widely discussed as a survival strategy for the ANC party,Footnote 32 several studies suggest that clientelism also matters in candidate-based campaigns via individual tycoons’ wealth. Local clientelism is rooted in practices such as ukusisa in South Africa, a system in which a wealthy businessman loans goods (e.g., cattle) to a poor person from the village—to be repaid for the help later.Footnote 33 Ostensible philanthropy is generally moored in the “one hand washes the other” principle.Footnote 34 This, again, hints at potential advantages of clientelism for tycoon candidates.

Context and case selection

Following apartheid rule, South Africa held its inaugural democratic election in 1994.Footnote 35 Since then, the ANC has dominated South Africa’s political landscape, thanks to its status as a former liberation movement with close ties to the broad population. Dense networks between business, government, and political parties have increasingly defined South African politics, giving rise to an “ANC oligarchy”Footnote 36 as high-profile ANC members used their political connections to amass huge personal fortunes in business. Estimates suggest that 40 percent of ANC MPs have business interests as directors or through ownership,Footnote 37 while in 2014, more than half the cabinet members of Jacob Zuma’s government had “major business interests.”Footnote 38

While many of the early links between business and politics relied on ANC members who were active in the anti-apartheid struggle, in recent years a number of tycoons without prior links to the ANC have gained political power. Herman Mashaba, for example, had been elected mayor for the Democratic Alliance in Johannesburg in 2016, and in 2020 launched a new party, Action SA. Philani Mavundla quit the ANC to join the National Freedom Party in 2019—only to switch gears again and found the Abantu Batho Congress, a new party that Mavundla continues to lead. Overall, tycoons are increasingly escaping the ANC orbit and keeping their political options open.

Of course, political loyalties never stood in the way of self-enrichment in South Africa, as suggested by the rise of so-called “tenderpreneurs”Footnote 39 —businesspeople who utilize their connections across the political spectrum to obtain lucrative government tenders and contracts. Allegations of egregious rent-seeking linked to tycoons from the Gupta family culminated in the unprecedented 2018 resignation of the former president Jacob Zuma.

Zuma’s place was taken by President Cyril Ramaphosa, arguably South Africa’s most successful tycoon candidate. A former anti-apartheid activist, Ramaphosa was initially sidestepped in internal ANC power struggles and left politics after the democratic transition to build a business empire. Having maintained links to the ANC, Ramaphosa gradually re-entered national politics—and led the ANC to yet another victory in the national elections of 2019. In 2020, riding a wave of public disgust with government capture by large business, president Ramaphosa—one of the richest individuals in the entire African region—published a bombshell letter to the ANC, accusing the party leadership and big business of corruption.Footnote 40 Ramaphosa’s own record appears relatively “clean” by South African standards, despite the ongoing allegations of money laundering in 2023, and he has sought to present himself as an anti-corruption crusader.

South Africa is an ideal setting to explore the voters’ “inter-tycoon” evaluations and the relative appeal of distinct electoral strategies pursued by tycoon candidates. Close links between business and politics are not rare events in South Africa and are salient to the population at large. Importantly, while many business tycoons are white South Africans, there are numerous prominent examples of black South African business tycoons too. The post-apartheid era has seen the rise of a growing black middle-class—and a new black economic elite (Seekings and Nattrass Reference Seekings and Nattrass.2005). A subset of this black elite constitutes prominent business tycoons, most famously former mayor of Johannesburg and current leader of the ActionSA party, Herman Mashaba; President Cyril Ramaphosa; former ANC minister Tokyo Sexwale; as well as business tycoons operating outside the formal channels of politics, like Patrice Motsepe and Sipho Nkosi. This suggests that a candidate’s wealth or status as a business tycoon cannot be directly inferred from racial classifications.

Moreover, all four theoretical mechanisms at the center of our study are highly plausible empirically in the South African context. Regarding competence signaling, South Africa emerged from apartheid rule with its black population uniformly impoverished yet politically empowered, generating sufficient social mobilityFootnote 41 for occasional rags-to-riches stories and personal credit-claiming for business success. Deep grievances related to ethnic politics provide a potent cleavage for racial framing tactics.Footnote 42 A thriving media industryFootnote 43 ensures that fame can “travel” and mobilize voters. Finally, corruption and a sufficiently weak rule of lawFootnote 44 render illegal tactics such as clientelism available to tycoon candidates. These structural conditions make South Africa into a quasi-laboratory for testing a broad spectrum of mechanisms through which material capital is converted into political support at the ballot box.

Finally, South Africa as such presents a challenging terrain for politically ambitious tycoons. The prevalent liberation ideology in all major political forces in South Africa is left-leaning and anti-corporate.Footnote 45 Labor unions are strong.Footnote 46 Popular outrage at big business corruption is the norm, including via organized protests.Footnote 47 This “tycoon-hostile” political environment is particularly suited to study the comparative efficacy of various electoral strategies pursued by tycoon candidates.

Experimental design and survey administration

To test the observable implications of the theoretical mechanisms, we marshal original data from a survey experiment in South Africa. We designed and implemented a new survey in July and August of 2017, administered in collaboration with Citizen Surveys, a leading South African survey agency (that has conducted surveys for, e.g., the World Bank and the Afrobarometer). The sample frame for the survey is the 2011 census which covers all enumeration areas (EAs) in South Africa. We used a stratified, multistage probability sampling strategy to draw the sample (n=1500) across all nine provinces of South Africa (including the large Metros, as well as urban and rural areas).Footnote 48 The sample is representative—and reflects the broader demographics—of the adult South African population at the national level. Based on the sampling strategy, we randomly selected 250 EAs for field work. Within each EA, the team of enumerators were assigned to a random starting point and then conducted a random walk to select households for interviews. In the last step, a respondent (18 years or older) was randomly selected for an interview (six interviews were conducted per EA). Interviews were conducted face-to-face by trained enumerators using tablet-based questionnaires. Respondents were given the choice of being interviewed in one of the six local languages.

In addition to data quality advantages from nationally representative sampling and professional, face-to-face, context-sensitive administration of the survey instrument, our design benefits from the experimental component. Observational studies of voting behavior suffer from endogeneity problemsFootnote 49 which the experimental design alleviates. While an increasing number of studies use conjoint designs to test voter support for candidates that vary on many dimensions, a simple experimental design is best-suited for our purposes because we want to establish the effectiveness of a limited number of mechanisms that could make voters more (or less) likely to support certain tycoons running for office (when compared to other tycoons).Footnote 50 Our design also allows us to avoid potential pitfalls of conjoint experiments.Footnote 51

Our experimental design was registered prior to survey implementation and data analysis.Footnote 52 For the experiment, 1500 survey respondents were randomly assigned to one of five experimental groups using complete random assignment, such that each experimental group contained 300 respondents. The randomization procedure was precoded onto the tablet and independent of enumerators in the field.

The survey experiment involves the description of a hypothetical tycoon candidate running for mayor in the respondent’s municipality. Businesspeople are often involved in municipal politics in South Africa and, as noted previously, there are numerous examples of tycoon candidates (such as Mavundla or Mashaba) running for office in municipal elections.Footnote 53

Table 1 presents the vignettes shown to the five respondent groups. All five scenarios are realistic and salient in the South African context, as elaborated below, while also sufficiently ubiquitous so as to minimize associations with any particular real-life candidate.

Table 1. Survey experimental vignettes

The baseline vignette describes the candidate as a “very wealthy businessperson” who “owns a large corporation.” Great wealth and corporate ownership are two common traits of tycoons involved in politics not just in South Africa but around the world. The four treatment vignettes randomly add short pieces of information to the baseline vignette to prime the respondent with a specific mechanism being tested.Footnote 54 After reading the description of the candidate in their experimental group, respondents are asked how likely they would be to support the candidate on a five-point scale from “very unlikely” to “very likely.”

In the competence signaling vignette, respondents are informed that the tycoon candidate has been “very successful in creating a profitable business.” This is critical since “tycoon” status can result from inheritance (i.e., luck) rather than a candidate’s (earned) success. In the racial framing vignette, the candidate is described as “a strong advocate of removing apartheid symbols and statues from government buildings and public spaces.” The role of public symbols associated with colonialism and apartheid—recently targeted by the Rhodes Must Fall movement—has ignited fierce debate throughout South African society and politics and constitutes one of the most salient non-economic political issues. The fame vignette informs respondents that the tycoon candidate is “a famous person in South Africa who often appears on television.” Fame and the associated legitimacy in the public eye have been used as a launch pad for many political candidates in South Africa, including actors (e.g., Fana Mokoena) and tycoons (e.g., Tokyo Sexwale). Finally, the clientelism vignette notifies respondents that the tycoon candidate “offers housing and food parcels to people in your local area who support him politically.” Both food parcels and access to housing have been identified as typical channels for clientelist distribution in South Africa.Footnote 55 This phrasing was also validated in our pre-survey tests as being directly associated with clientelism. Any mechanisms linking clientelism to tycoon candidates are likely amplified by the weak regulatory framework on money in politics: at the time of the survey in 2017, parties and candidates were not required to disclose private sources of funding, or how such funding is spent.

Another point regarding the political role of tycoons’ wealth relative to non-tycoon candidates must be made, based on recently available data.Footnote 56 Business tycoon Herman Mashaba, for instance, has channeled substantial amounts of his private wealth into his own party, ActionSA.Footnote 57 Likewise, the company Mashaba founded and which made him rich—Black Like Me—has made substantial donations to ActionSA. This shows that business tycoons, like Mashaba, have opportunities to channel personal wealth into their own election campaigns—something that is much less likely for non-tycoon candidates without similar financial means. For the ANC, in comparison, a substantial amount of their party donations come from corporations and trusts like the ANC affiliated Chancellor House Trust fund. The key point is that tycoons’ personal wealth enable them to make credible promises to channel their own funds into (clientelist) election campaigns. Non-tycoon candidates in South Africa, in contrast, more often rely on party funds and modes of (clientelist) distribution orchestrated by party machines, like the ANC, when engaging in elections campaign.Footnote 58

Methods and model

To analyze our survey experiment, we use the linear regression model in Equation (1). Variable descriptions, summary statistics, and a power test appear in Appendices A-C in the Supplementary Material:

(1) $$y_{i} = a + dT_{i}+ e_{i}$$

The dependent variable, y i , is respondents’ stated support for the tycoon candidate presented in their experimental group which is measured on a five-point Likert scale, as is common in survey experiments on voting behavior.Footnote 59 To facilitate the interpretation of results, we recode this scale to vary from 0 to 100.Footnote 60 (Recoding does not change the underlying results.) T is the treatment indicator with five groups of randomly assigned respondents, a is the average response in the baseline group, and d is the effect of the treatment(s) on the outcome (relative to the baseline support, a).

The key requirement for d to identify the effect of the tycoon candidate traits is proper randomization procedure ensuring that the assignment to treatment groups is orthogonal to observable and unobservable pretreatment characteristics of respondents, and minimizing confounding risks. We conduct a balance test (Appendix D) by using a multinomial regression with the five-category treatment indicator as the dependent variable and the following socio-economic covariates as regressors: living standards, education, social grant receipt, political awareness, ANC or DA partisanship, racial group classification, gender, age, urban–rural residence, and province. The test shows no particular relation between these covariates and treatment assignment, minimizing concerns about selection effects or covariate imbalances.

Results

The overall distribution of the dependent variable indicates that electoral support across tycoon candidates is bifurcated (Appendix E). While circa 50 percent of all respondents are (very) unlikely to support the tycoon candidate described to them, around 40 percent are (very) likely to support the candidate, and 10 percent are indifferent. To get a sense of which voters might support tycoon candidates, Table 2 shows a basic set of respondent characteristics as predictors of tycoon support. We show these for the full sample and by subsamples of experimental groups. While these findings are descriptive and not causally identified, results from the full sample suggest that ANC partisans and politically uninformed respondents are more supportive of tycoons running for office, while older people, females, and social grant recipients are less supportive. Interestingly, across the full sample and the experimental groups, living standard, education, and urban–rural residence are not closely related to voter support for tycoon candidates.

Table 2. Predictors of tycoon support

Notes: OLS regression (t-statistics in parentheses). Full set of province fixed effects (FE) included. Reference groups for urban: Rural area; reference group for female: Male; reference group for Colored/Indian and White: Black. A test for multicollinearity among the covariates, using the Variance Inflation Factor (VIF), shows no reason for concern. The VIF for each covariate falls between 1.11 (min.) and 2.26 (max.) with a mean VIF of 1.55. ***p<0.01, **p<0.05, *p<0.1.

Next, we analyze the mechanisms behind the differential support across tycoon candidates. Figure 1 summarizes the first set of findings from the experiment. The results are based on OLS regression equivalent to Equation (1), without additional covariates. Appendix F (Table F1) in the supplementary material provides the corresponding regression table—and, additionally, shows that using an ordered logistic model yields substantively similar results. Appendix F (Figure F2) also shows the straight comparisons of means. Since the five experimental groups are balanced on pretreatment characteristics, the inclusion of additional covariates is not necessary. However, controlling for pretreatment covariates does not change the results (Appendix G). The average support for the tycoon candidate in the baseline group is 43.3 (on a 0–100 scale), somewhat lower than the overall average of 46.4.

Figure 1. Mechanisms of support across tycoon candidates.

Note: The dots represent coefficients (marginal effects) from OLS regressions. The dependent variable is candidate support (scaled 0–100). The dashed lines are 95% confidence intervals. Treatment groups are shown on the y-axis. Marginal effects are estimated relative to the baseline tycoon category (see Table 1). n=1435.

Figure 1 displays the coefficients (dots) and confidence intervals (dashed lines) from regressing support across tycoon candidates on the treatment group indicators. The coefficients show the difference in mean support between the baseline group and the respective treatment groups. The vertical line shows when confidence intervals cut across zero, rendering the effects statistically (in)significant at the 95 percent level.

Only clientelism boosts the electoral support of tycoon candidates at a statistically significant level. Voter support increases by 7.73 points on a 0–100 scale (p=0.01) when tycoon candidates promise material goods and benefits to voters in return for political support (we later show that this magnitude is much higher among certain population subsets.) The significance of clientelist appeals suggests that some of the electoral disadvantage tycoon candidates may experience—for example, by virtue of their extravagant wealth being regarded as illegitimate or otherwise stigmatizing amidst stark inequality—can be offset by the promise of sharing that wealth during elections or by using clientelism to signal redistributive intent after the election. Clientelist promises during elections increase chances of electoral success for tycoon candidates more effectively than campaigns relying on competence signaling, framing around salient non-economic issues such as race, or personal fame.

Our paper is the first to identify the efficacy of clientelist strategies for tycoon candidates and to highlight this mechanism as a key reason why voters prefer some tycoon candidates rather than others. Whereas existing literature studies non-tycoon candidates or brokers who must rely on affiliations to a political party or access to state coffers,Footnote 61 we posit that tycoon candidates’ wealth and business power may enhance the credibility of clientelist promises (or threats) regardless of any organizational links to the state by tycoon candidates. With the caveat that studies of clientelism’s effectiveness (for non-tycoon candidates) in developing democracies use divergent research designs, we can cautiously relate findings from this literature to our own estimates. We find that clientelism boosts tycoon support by circa 8 points. Consistent with this, our ordered logit estimates (Appendix F, Figure F2) show that clientelism boosts the probability of (strong) tycoon support by 6.5 percent (and equivalently reduces the probability of not supporting the tycoon). By comparison, scholars have foundFootnote 62 : a much smaller (1–5 percent) and mostly insignificant effects of cash handouts on vote choice and turnout in a number of African countries; a clientelist boost in vote share of 4–6 percent for governors in Brazil; and a larger (11.7 percent) but insignificant effect in Mexico. Our estimates therefore appear sizeable (and much more so among the poorest voters as shown below), suggesting that the candidates’ tycoon status may enhance the efficacy of clientelism relative to the use of clientelism by non-tycoon candidates featured in the literature.

Robustness checks

We address four potential concerns here. First, our experiment references a municipal election which may prime respondents to think of business candidates from their localities. We reproduce all regressions with a full set of municipality fixed effects. Although a fairly generic way to address this concern, it turns attention to within-municipality variation and captures all municipality-level differences—including the potential presence of tycoon candidates in local politics—that might confound the inference. Including municipality fixed effects does not change the results (Appendix H).

Second, face-to-face interviews are social interactions: although all field workers were thoroughly trained for our survey, the manner in which the enumerator conducts the interview may still affect respondents’ answers. We replicate the findings in Figure 1 using a full set of interviewer fixed effects. This too does not change the results (Appendix I).

Third, given South Africa’s racialized politics, interviews featuring enumerator–respondent pairs from distinct racial groups may impact responses. We create a variable that matches respondent and interviewer racial classification (indicating a match in 72 percent of all interviews). Next, we check whether controlling for shared racial group affiliation affects the results. As shown in the Appendix J, it does not.

Finally, the clientelism treatment might generate social desirability bias since respondents may not want to admit that their votes are for sale. However, even if social desirability bias were present, it would bias the results toward a null-finding (relative to the baseline). Hence, any potential clientelism effect should be a conservative estimate.

Overall, the robustness checks do not challenge our key finding: clientelist distribution stands out as an effective driver of voter support across tycoon candidates. Indeed, the estimated effect and statistical significance of the clientelism treatment are very stable across all robustness tests.

Heterogeneous treatment effects

Our findings beg the question of whether the four mechanisms—competence signaling, racial framing, fame, and clientelism—can be leveraged more (or less) effectively by tycoon candidates among particular subgroups of the electorate. We test whether covariates related to living standards, political awareness, race, urban–rural divide, and partisanship moderate the treatment effects.Footnote 63 To alleviate concerns about covariate confounding, all models control for the pretreatment variables used for balance testing (Appendix D), which should also improve the precision of the effect estimates.Footnote 64

Figure 2 explores whether the effects of the four treatment indicators are contingent on the respondents’ living standards. Appendix K provides the corresponding regression table. The underlying regressions include an interaction termFootnote 65 between the respective experimental treatment and a measure of living standards (scaled 0–12) with higher values indicating better living standards. In addition to the conditional marginal effects of the treatment variables, each plot displays the distribution of the living standards measure (in percent on the left y-axis), verifying that we have observations across the entire scale of the living standards measure.

Figure 2. Treatment effects and living standards.

Note: The plots show the marginal effect of the treatments conditional on levels of living standards (scaled 0–12). The dependent variable is candidate support (scaled 0–100). Estimates are from OLS regressions. All models include the full set of covariate controls used for balance testing (see Appendix D). The solid line represents marginal effects of the treatment conditional on levels of living standards. The estimated marginal effects are shown on the right y-axis. The dashed vertical lines are 95% confidence intervals. The gray-shaded histogram shows the distribution of the living standards measure in percent (along the left y-axis). Low/high values of living standards are given by low/high values on the x-axis. n=1360.

Figure 2 reveals that people’s living standards do little to moderate the effects of competence signaling, racial framing, and fame. There is a tendency for wealthier people to express higher support for tycoons signaling competence, but the effect is estimated relatively imprecisely across all levels of living standards. By contrast, the effect of tycoon candidates’ clientelist appeals is positive and statistically significant for people living in poor material conditions—as living standards rise, however, this effect fades entirely. The magnitude of the “clientelist boost” for tycoon candidates from the poorest voters relative to the most well-off voters is substantial at circa 23 points. Meanwhile, relative to the poorest voters in the baseline group, tycoon candidates receive a 17.2 point clientelist boost in support from the poorest voters in the clientelism treatment group (see Appendix K).

To check the robustness of this finding, we replace the living standards measure with social grant receipt. The findings for social grant receipt closely mirror those for living standards (Appendix L).Footnote 66 As shown in Table 2, social grant recipients are a priori significantly less likely to support tycoon candidates relative to non-recipients: this highlights that capturing the votes of underprivileged groups is, indeed, a challenge for tycoon candidates. Since social grant recipients are significantly disinclined to support tycoon candidates a priori, our findings hint at the effectiveness of clientelism at overturning negative attitudes toward tycoon candidates.

Next, we examine whether treatment effects differ based on the level of political awareness Footnote 67 of respondents. We construct a political awareness index from four factual multiple-choice questions in our survey.Footnote 68 Once again, the previously established pattern emerges: political awareness strongly moderates the effect of clientelism (Appendix M). Among the least politically informed voters, tycoon candidates engaging in clientelism receive a 26-point boost in support compared to their support among the most politically informed voters (for whom the effect of clientelism is insignificant; see Appendix M).

Next, Figure 3 shows how treatment effects differ across racial groups. Racial group affiliation significantly moderates the effect of the racial framing treatment (but not the effects of the other treatmentsFootnote 69 )—yet with a crucial nuance. Instead of attracting new black voters, racial framing deployed by tycoon candidates generates a particularly strong negative response from white voters.

Figure 3. Treatment effects and racial group.

Note: The plots show the marginal effect of the treatments conditional racial group affiliation. The dependent variable is candidate support (scaled 0–100). All models include the full set of covariate controls used for balance testing (see Appendix D). Following South African official classifications, racial groups are defined as black, colored (mixed racial affiliation), or white. The gray-shaded histogram shows the distribution of racial groups in percent (along the left y-axis). For other details, see notes to Figure 2. n=1360.

As panel B of Figure 3 shows, the racial framing treatment has a significantly negative effect on tycoon support for white respondents. Although the framing effect for black South Africans is not different from zero, it is significantly different from the—negative—framing effect for white South Africans. The magnitude of the framing effect increases by a substantial 27 points for black South Africans compared to white South Africans (see Appendix N).

Our finding extends the work of Ferree (Reference Ferree2010) highlighting the racialized nature of South African politics. While Ferree focuses on racial framing by the ANC party (e.g., casting opposition parties as “white elitists”), we show that racial frames can also backfire and lead to the loss of white voters, at least when such frames are deployed by tycoon candidates.

Finally, we examine urban–rural divide, as well as partisan affiliation (with ANC or DA) as potential moderators of the treatment effects given that both factors are highlighted in the literature on voting behavior in Africa.Footnote 70 We find that neither variable significantly moderates the impact of any of the treatments (see Appendices O and P). Respondents’ support across tycoon candidates is not contingent on whether respondents live in cities versus rural areas—or back the ruling versus opposition parties.

It is reasonable to ask whether our findings might extend to all candidates, regardless of their tycoon status. Although our study does not address this question, extant work suggests that citizens evaluate the super-rich very differently from other socioeconomic classes.Footnote 71 Hence, while cross-class comparison of tycoon and non-tycoon candidates is an important direction for future research, our intra-class analysis of tycoon candidates offers crucial insights in its own right.

External validity

Our findings should apply particularly to developing democracies where, on the one hand, high wealth concentration and inequality give rise to “tycoons” as members of an exclusive economic elite, and, on the other hand, sufficiently weak rule of law ensures that the full spectrum of tactics, including illegal ones such as clientelism, are available to tycoon candidates. Emerging democracies such as Indonesia,Footnote 72 Brazil,Footnote 73 or EthiopiaFootnote 74 —among many others—share precisely these characteristics. On the other hand, tycoons in autocratic regimes face a more restricted set of political options,Footnote 75 such that our findings (to the extent performative elections still take place in an autocracy) may not apply there.

Regarding the efficacy of specific mechanisms beyond the South African context, there is qualitative evidence that clientelism is practiced by tycoon candidates in some post-Soviet democracies.Footnote 76 Furthermore, relative to other African countries, the prevalence of clientelism as such in South Africa is below average for the region,Footnote 77 suggesting that clientelistic appeals from tycoons may be even more effective in countries where clientelism itself is more common. Finally, framing by wealthy political actors has swayed voters away from their material interests in polities such as India and Thailand.Footnote 78

Meanwhile, the insignificance of competence signaling suggests an important boundary condition. Scholars have shown that competence may not generate political support in the absence of trust, for example, if voters are unconvinced that a competent candidate would use her skills to their benefit if elected.Footnote 79 According to Afrobarometer data from 36 countries, South Africa scores in the bottom third on public’s trust in the state.Footnote 80 Conversely, in countries with higher levels of political trust, competence signaling may be more effective for tycoon candidates.

Conclusion

In big-picture terms, our study sheds new light on a classical question in political economy: what happens when minority-enriching capitalism collides with majority-empowering democracy? Established lines of inquiry have emphasized two possible scenarios—increasing economic protections of population by the state, for example, via welfare capitalismFootnote 81 —or, more pessimistically, institutional capture of democracy by wealthy elites.Footnote 82 The latter literature has predominantly focused on macro-level conditions that facilitate capture.

Instead, our study contributes by analyzing the micro-level voter calculus in their differential support across tycoon candidates. While scholars have noted that rival tycoons may compete for political office,Footnote 83 we advance the literature by analyzing how they may win. We find that clientelism boosts the electoral support of tycoon candidates significantly on average and even more so among the poorest. Although there are strong theoretical reasons to expect competence signaling, racial framing, and fame to help tycoon candidates win office, only clientelism does. Meanwhile, racial framing significantly reduces tycoon support among white voters. Whereas most studies of business influence in politics rely on case studies or data provided by firms (via surveys or regulatory filings), we harness the experimental method to examine the receptivity of broader population to discrete electoral strategies across tycoon candidates.

Our study also pertains to the third outcome scenario for the clash between material inequality and the political empowerment of the masses—namely the rise of populism. Our analysis helps explain the counterintuitive phenomenon of certain business elites becoming the champions of anti-elite politics.Footnote 84 We show that clientelism is an effective pathway for tycoons to capture not necessarily the state—but, more directly, the hearts and minds of voters at the ballot box.

Finally, we offer two implications for the vast scholarship on clientelism. First, while this literature has examined extensively broker types and voter attributes that elicit particular clientelistic strategies, it has paid less attention to the characteristics of political candidates themselves. Our analysis suggests that a candidate’s personal wealth, and his business background, may be particularly relevant.Footnote 85 Indeed, while existing literature conceptualizes clientelism as intrinsically a group effort—a complex organizational undertaking of “machine politics”Footnote 86 —, our study suggests that tycoons qua politically supersized individuals may independently shape clientelistic exchanges. Second, while multiple studies show that the poor are more responsive to clientelistic incentives, this finding is far from uniform.Footnote 87 Factors like civil society weakness or democratic experience may explain the variation in clientelist politics better than poverty levels both across and within countries. Furthermore, the poor may be more likely to resent tycoon candidates located at the polar opposite of the income and wealth distributions, given the highest potential for personal antipathy and inequality aversion. Hence, it is not clear a priori whether poor voters would punish or reward candidates who are extravagantly wealthy (reason to resent) yet also engage in clientelism (reason to reward). We find that the latter effect predominates.

To conclude, consider Thomas Piketty’s treatment of South Africa as emblematic of the global conflict between “ordinary citizens” and “private corporations.”Footnote 88 Throughout his seminal volume, Piketty revisits the notorious massacre of 2012 in which South African police killed 34 striking miners at the Lonmin Mine near Johannesburg to protect the interests of the mine owners. To add a stark detail to this account, South Africa’s preeminent tycoon (and now president) Cyril Ramaphosa was on Lonmin’s board at the time as its largest shareholder—and allegedly pushed the government for a forceful response to the strike.Footnote 89 Our inquiry in this context highlights a glaring political paradox amidst intense economic conflict in South Africa and beyond: impoverished citizens are voting super-wealthy corporate owners into power. Theorizing and testing specific mechanisms of electoral support across tycoon candidates, our study took a step toward understanding this crucial phenomenon. While we investigated why voters support some tycoon candidates rather than others, the question of why voters may support tycoons over non-tycoon candidates presents a promising direction for future research.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/bap.2024.4.

Data availability

Replication data and files will be made publicly available upon publication.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank three anonymous reviewers; Daniel Blake, Srividya Jandhyala, Nan Jia, Marko Klasnja, Robert Kubinec, Neil Malhotra, David Szakonyi, Daniel Treisman, Gautam Nair, Zoltan Fazekas; as well as the audiences at Darla Moore School of Business (University of South Carolina), Konstanz University (Politics of Inequality seminar), Copenhagen Business School (Money in Politics Conference), and the American Political Science Association for their generous feedback.

Competing interests

The authors have no competing interests to declare.

Financial support

We acknowledge financial support from the Independent Research Council Denmark (grant number: DFF—4182-00080).

Footnotes

2 Page, Bartels, and Seawright (Reference Page, Bartels and Seawright2013).

4 According to a 2012 survey conducted across 23 Western and developing countries, only 39% of adults “think that the rich in their country deserve their wealth” (Economist 2012).

5 Carnes and Lupu (Reference Carnes and Lupu2016); Gilens, Patterson, and Haines (Reference Gilens, Patterson and Haines2021); Solt (Reference Solt2008).

6 Markus and Charnysh (Reference Markus and Charnysh2017, 1641) also distinguish between “state captors,” that is, tycoons who assume state office, and “business captors,” that is, state officials who use their office to amass extreme wealth, further noting that “although state captors are globally ubiquitous, a major difference between the Western and the developing worlds is that business captors find the developing world much easier to operate in.”

8 Culpepper (Reference Culpepper2010).

9 Page, Seawright, and Lacombe (Reference Page, Seawright and Lacombe2018).

10 Jia, Markus, and Werner (Reference Jia, Markus and Werner2023).

11 Gehlbach, Sonin, and Zhuravskaya (Reference Gehlbach, Sonin and Zhuravskaya2010); Hou (Reference Hou2019); Szakonyi (Reference Szakonyi2020).

13 Besley and Reynal-Querol (Reference Besley and Reynal-Querol2011).

14 Szakonyi (Reference Szakonyi2020, 217–219).

15 Culpepper (Reference Culpepper2010).

16 News24 (2016).

17 Winters (Reference Winters2011); Hellman (Reference Hellman1998).

19 Chong and Druckman (Reference Chong and Druckman2007, 637).

20 Chauchard, Klašnja, and Harish (Reference Chauchard, Klašnja and Harish2019); Lerman, Sadin, and Trachtman (Reference Lerman, Sadin and Trachtman2017).

21 Markus and Charnysh (Reference Markus and Charnysh2017); Phongpaichit and Baker (Reference Phongpaichit and Baker2004).

22 World Bank (2022).

23 Indeed, the political dominance of the ANC party in post-apartheid South Africa has been attributed to ANC’s manipulation of racial topics to discredit the opposition (Ferree Reference Ferree2010).

24 Onishi and Gebrekidan (Reference Onishi and Gebrekidan2018).

25 West and Orman (Reference West and Orman2003); Inthorn and Street (Reference Inthorn and Street2011); Majic, O’Neill, and Bernhard (Reference Majic, O’Neill and Bernhard2020).

26 Marshall (Reference Marshall2014).

27 West and Orman (Reference West and Orman2003).

28 Knecht and Rosentrater (Reference Knecht and Rosentrater2021).

30 Kramon (Reference Kramon2018).

31 Mares (Reference Mares2015); Robinson and Verdier (Reference Robinson and Verdier2013).

33 Carton, Laband, and Sithole (Reference Carton, Laband and Sithole2008).

34 Kuljian (Reference Kuljian2005).

35 For an overview of apartheid’s impact on business environment, see Minefee and Bucheli (Reference Minefee and Bucheli2021).

36 Lodge (Reference Lodge2014).

37 Southall (Reference Southall2008, 293).

38 Kesselman et al. (Reference Kesselman, Krieger and Joseph2019, 493).

39 Southall (Reference Southall2008).

40 Full details of the letter are available in News24 (2020).

41 Louw, Van Der Berg, and Yu (Reference Louw, Van Der Berg and Yu2007).

42 Ferree (Reference Ferree2010).

43 Teer-Tomaselli, Wasserman, and De Beer (Reference Teer-Tomaselli, Wasserman and De Beer2007).

44 Koelble (Reference Koelble2022).

45 Southall (Reference Southall2013).

46 Evans and Sil (Reference Evans and Sil2020).

47 Onishi and Gebrekidan (Reference Onishi and Gebrekidan2018).

48 For sampling, geographical area (metro, urban non-metro, and rural) and racial classification (black, colored, Indian, white) were used as stratification variables in the selection of enumeration areas (EAs).

49 Klašnja and Tucker (Reference Klašnja and Tucker2013).

50 Schweinberger (Reference Schweinberger2022).

51 Compared to ours, conjoint designs could have unclear and often arbitrary reference categories, which may seriously impact data interpretation and inference (Leeper, Hobolt, and Tilley Reference Leeper, Hobolt and Tilley2020). Conjoint designs are cognitively demanding for the respondents who, as a result, may satisfice by relying on heuristics which can degrade response quality (Bansak et al. Reference Bansak, Hainmueller, Hopkins and Yamamoto2018). The independent randomization of many candidate traits in conjoint designs may also produce unrealistic profiles, and, separately, the simultaneous assessment of numerous hypotheses may encourage data mining (Bansak et al. Reference Bansak, Hainmueller, Hopkins, Yamamoto, Druckman and Green2019).

52 The pre-registration plan is available at https://osf.io/b32ru.

53 Municipal elections in South Africa are held using a mixed-member system: voters choose individual candidates in single-member wards, and parties on a (proportional) party list ballot. Although mayoral candidates run on party lists, contests between mayoral candidates are crucial. Municipal campaigns revolve around mayoral candidates, and mayors wield substantial executive powers. Evidence suggests that partisan voting is in decline in South Africa and that voters evaluate the qualities of specific leadership candidates (Schulz-Herzenberg Reference Schulz-Herzenberg2019). Indeed, in the run-up to the 2016 municipal elections, differences between mayoral candidates were highlighted in the South African media as being “more important than ever” (Grootes Reference Grootes2016) while polls of voter support for—and expert analyses of—different mayoral candidates dominated news coverage of the elections (see, e.g., Grootes Reference Grootes2016; Mail and Guardian 2016).

54 Schweinberger (Reference Schweinberger2022).

56 In 2021, a new set of regulations under the Political Party Funding Act came into effect. Private donations exceeding 100.000 Rand must now be publicly disclosed. Information on private donations to political parties since 2021 is available from the Electoral Commission of South Africa at https://www.elections.org.za/.

57 The Published Declarations Report from the Electoral Commission of South African shows that for the first quarter of 2023, Mashaba personally donated 2 million rands to ActionSA.

59 For example, Klašnja and Tucker (Reference Klašnja and Tucker2013).

60 Our simple recoding assigns 0 to “very unlikely to support candidate,” 25 to “unlikely…”, 50 to “neither unlikely nor likely…,” 75 to “likely…”, and 100 to “very likely…”. We treat the Likert scale as approximately continuous in line with the literature.

61 Mares and Young (Reference Mares and Young2016).

62 Guardado and Wantchekon (Reference Guardado and Wantchekon2018); Gingerich (Reference Gingerich2014); Greene (Reference Greene2021).

63 The number of observations drop when to 1,360 when including covariates in the regressions. In Appendix Q, we check whether the missing observations are different from non-missing observations (for sets of covariates with and without full data). The results show no reason for concern.

64 Gerber and Green (Reference Gerber and Green2012, 98).

65 Interacting an experimental treatment variable with a non-experimental covariate (living standards) implies that we no longer have a purely exogenous source of random assignment to treatment, complicating causal inference (Gerber and Green Reference Gerber and Green2012). However, in line with the recent literature (Klašnja, Lupu, and Tucker Reference Klašnja, Lupu and Tucker2021; Bøttkjær and Justesen Reference Bøttkjær and Justesen2021), this is our best chance for examining whether poverty moderates the link between the treatments and the outcome variable.

66 In South Africa, social grants are paid out on the basis of an income-based means test, and reach almost half of South African households on a monthly basis in the form cash transfers such as pensions and child support (Plagerson et al. Reference Plagerson, Patel, Hochfeld and Ulriksen2019).

67 Klašnja (Reference Klašnja2017).

68 Each of the questions has only one correct answer: (a) the name of the second largest political party in the South African parliament, (b) the official unemployment rate in South Africa, (c) the name of the finance minister in South Africa, and (d) the country that is South Africa’s largest trading partner. The index is additive, ranging from zero to four.

69 The effect of clientelism for black South Africans (panel D) is significantly different from zero, but it is not significantly different from the effect for colored or white South Africans.

70 Boone (Reference Boone2011); Bartels and Kramon (Reference Bartels and Kramon2020).

71 Lansley (Reference Lansley2006); Rowlingson, Sood, and Tu (Reference Rowlingson, Sood and Tu2021); Lamont (Reference Lamont2009); Williams (Reference Williams2017).

72 Winters (Reference Winters2013).

73 Nichter (Reference Nichter2018).

74 Gebregziabher and Hout (Reference Gebregziabher and Hout2018).

77 Mares and Young (Reference Mares and Young2016, 269).

78 Chauchard, Klašnja, and Harish (Reference Chauchard, Klašnja and Harish2019); Gray (Reference Gray1992).

79 Di Tella and Rotemberg (Reference Di Tella and Rotemberg2018).

80 Bratton and Gyimah-Boadi (Reference Bratton and Gyimah-Boadi2016).

81 Polanyi (Reference Polanyi1944).

82 Winters (Reference Winters2011).

83 Markus and Charnysh (Reference Markus and Charnysh2017).

84 Blake, Markus, and Martinez-Suarez (Reference Blake, Markus and Martinez-Suarez2024).

85 On the one hand, the monitoring of broker agents by political principals is a key challenge for successful clientelistic exchange (Larreguy, Montiel Olea, and Querubin Reference Larreguy, Olea and Querubin2017). To the extent a super-wealthy candidate has less need for a broker—and, at the extreme, may dispense with a broker altogether, due to the candidate’s own fortune being a credible signal of future redistribution to voters—the candidate will have resolved this fundamental challenge. On the other hand, enforcement vis-à-vis the voters, that is, the correct execution of positive and negative individual inducements, is another problem for the organization of clientelism. To the extent a candidate’s wealth is conducive to establishing the norms of reciprocity with voters, which the literature flags as important in solving this problem (Lawson and Greene Reference Lawson and Greene2014), such personal wealth would, again, emerge as a critical theoretical dimension for clientelism.

87 Mares and Young (Reference Mares and Young2016); Jensen and Justesen (Reference Jensen and Justesen2014); Jöst and Lust (Reference Jöst and Lust2022).

88 Piketty (Reference Piketty2014, 745).

89 Sil and Samuelson (Reference Sil and Samuelson2018, 6).

References

Arriola, Leonardo, Choi, Donghyun Danny, Davis, Justine, Phillips, Melanie, and Rakner, Lise. 2021. “Paying to Party: Candidate Resources and Party Switching in New Democracies.” Party Politics: 1354068821989563.Google Scholar
Bansak, Kirk, Hainmueller, Jens, Hopkins, Daniel, and Yamamoto, Teppei. 2018. “The Number of Choice Tasks and Survey Satisficing in Conjoint Experiments.” Political Analysis 26 (1): 112119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bansak, Kirk, Hainmueller, Jens, Hopkins, Daniel, and Yamamoto, Teppei. 2019. “Conjoint Survey Experiments.” In Cambridge Handbook of Advances in Experimental Political Science, edited by Druckman, James and Green, Donald. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bartels, Brandon, and Kramon, Eric. 2020. “Does Public Support for Judicial Power Depend on Who is in Political Power? Testing a Theory of Partisan Alignment in Africa.” American Political Science Review 114 (1): 144163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Besley, Timothy, and Reynal-Querol, Marta. 2011. “Do Democracies Select more Educated Leaders?American Political Science Review 115 (3): 552566.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blake, Daniel J., Markus, Stanislav, and Martinez-Suarez, Julio. 2024. “Populist Syndrome and Nonmarket Strategy.” Journal of Management Studies 61 (2): 525560. https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.12859.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boone, Catherine. 2011. “Politically Allocated Land Rights and the Geography of Electoral Violence: The Case of Kenya in the 1990s.” Comparative Political Studies 44 (10): 13111342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bøttkjær, Louise, and Justesen, Mogens K.. 2021. “Why Do Voters Support Corrupt Politicians? Experimental Evidence from South Africa.” The Journal of Politics 83 (2): 788793.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bratton, Michael, and Gyimah-Boadi, E.. 2016. Do Trustworthy Institutions Matter for Development? Corruption, Trust and Government Performance in Africa. Afrobarometer.Google Scholar
Busemeyer, Marius R., and Thelen, Kathleen. 2020. “Institutional Sources of Business Power.” World Politics 72 (3): 448480.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carnes, Nicholas, and Lupu, Noam. 2016. “Do Voters Dislike Working-Class Candidates? Voter Biases and the Descriptive Underrepresentation of the Working Class.” American Political Science Review 110 (4): 832844.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carton, Benedict, Laband, John, and Sithole, Jabulani. 2008. Zulu Identities: Being Zulu, Past and Present. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Chauchard, Simon, Klašnja, Marko, and Harish, S.P.. 2019. “Getting Rich Too Fast? Voters’ Reactions to Politicians’ Wealth Accumulation.” The Journal of Politics 81 (4): 11971209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chong, Dennis, and Druckman, James N.. 2007. “Framing Public Opinion in Competitive Democracies.” American Political Science Review 101 (4): 637655.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Culpepper, Pepper. 2010. Quiet Politics and Business Power: Corporate Control in Europe and Japan. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, Hannah. 2014. “Patronage from Below: Political Unrest in an Informal Settlement in South Africa.” African Affairs 113 (453): 518539.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Di Tella, Rafael, and Rotemberg, Julio J.. 2018. “Populism and the Return of the ‘Paranoid Style’.” Journal of Comparative Economics 46 (4): 9881005.Google Scholar
Economist. 2012. “Rich and infamous: Which countries think that the rich deserve their fortune?”, July 11.Google Scholar
Evans, Allison D., and Sil, Rudra. 2020. “The Dynamics of Labor Militancy in the Extractive Sector: Kazakhstan’s Oilfields and South Africa’s Platinum Mines in Comparative Perspective.” Comparative Political Studies 53 (6): 9921024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farrell, Henry, and Newman, Abraham L.. 2015. “Structuring Power: Business and Authority Beyond the Nation State.” Business and Politics 17 (3): 527552.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferree, Karen E. 2010. Framing the Race in South Africa: The Political Origins of Racial Census Elections. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiske, Susan T., Xu, Juan, Cuddy, Amy C., and Glick, Peter. 1999. “(Dis) Respecting versus (dis) Liking: Status and Interdependence Predict Ambivalent Stereotypes of Competence and Warmth.” Journal of Social Issues 55 (3): 473489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gebregziabher, Tefera Negash, and Hout, Wil. 2018. “The Rise of Oligarchy in Ethiopia: the Case of Wealth Creation Since 1991.” Review of African Political Economy 45 (157): 501510.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gehlbach, Scott, Sonin, Konstantin, and Zhuravskaya, Ekaterina. 2010. “Businessman Candidates.” American Journal of Political Science 54 (3): 718736.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerber, Alan S., and Green, Donald P.. 2012. Field Experiments: Design, Analysis, and Interpretation. New York: WW Norton.Google Scholar
Gilens, Martin, Patterson, Shawn, and Haines, Pavielle. 2021. “Campaign Finance Regulations and Public Policy.” American Political Science Review 115 (3): 10741081.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gingerich, Daniel W. 2014. “Brokered Politics in Brazil: An Empirical Analysis.” Quarterly Journal of Political Science 9 (3): 269300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, Christine E. 1992. “Royal Words and Their Unroyal Consequences.” Cultural Anthropology 7 (4): 448463.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greene, Kenneth F. 2021. “Campaign Effects and the Elusive Swing Voter in Modern Machine Politics.” Comparative Political Studies 54 (1): 77109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grootes, Stephen. 2016. Analysis: DA’s Herman Mashaba is a strong alternative to ANC’s Parks Tau. Daily Maverick, 17 January 2016. Available at https://bit.ly/3p9rPba Google Scholar
Guardado, Jenny, and Wantchekon, Leonard. 2018. “Do Electoral Handouts Affect Voting Behavior?Electoral Studies 53: 139149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hale, Henry. 2015. Patronal Politics: Eurasian Regime Dynamics in Comparative Perspective. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hellman, Joel. 1998. “Winners Take All.” World Politics 50 (2): 203234.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hou, Yue. 2019. The Private Sector in Public Office. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inthorn, Sanna, and Street, John. 2011. “‘Simon Cowell for Prime Minister’? Young Citizens’ Attitudes Towards Celebrity Politics.” Media, Culture & Society 33 (3): 479489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jensen, Peter, and Justesen, Mogens K.. 2014. “Poverty and Vote Buying: Survey-based Evidence from Africa.” Electoral Studies 33: 220232.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jia, Nan, Markus, Stanislav, and Werner, Timothy. 2023. “Theoretical Light in Empirical Darkness: Illuminating Strategic Concealment of Corporate Political Activity.” Academy of Management Review 48 (2): 264291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jöst, Prisca, and Lust, Ellen. 2022. “Receiving more, Expecting Less? Social Ties, Clientelism and the Poor’s Expectations of Future Service Provision.” World Development 158: 106008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kesselman, Mark, Krieger, Joel, and Joseph, William A. (2019). Introduction to Comparative Politics: Political Challenges and Changing Agendas, 8th ed. Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning.Google Scholar
Klašnja, Marko. 2017. “Uninformed Voters and Corrupt Politicians.” American Politics Research 45 (2): 256279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klašnja, Marko, Lupu, Noam, and Tucker, Joshua. 2021. “When Do Voters Sanction Corrupt Politicians?Journal of Experimental Political Science 8 (2): 161171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klašnja, Marko, and Tucker, Joshua A.. 2013. “The Economy, Corruption, and the Vote: Evidence from Experiments in Sweden and Moldova.” Electoral Studies 32 (3): 536543.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knecht, Tom, and Rosentrater, Ray. 2021. “The Glitterati Government? Amateur Celebrity Candidates in American Elections, 1928–2018.” Electoral Studies 69: 102252.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koelble, Thomas A. 2022. “Poverty, Corruption and Democracy: The Role of ‘Political Society’in Post-Colonial South Africa.” Globalizations 19 (7): 11371149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kramon, Eric. 2018. Money for Votes: The Causes and Consequences of Electoral Clientelism in Africa. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kroll, Yoram, and Davidovitz, Liema. 2003. “Inequality Aversion versus Risk Aversion.” Economica 70 (277): 1929.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuljian, Christa L. 2005. Philanthropy and equity: The case of South Africa. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Global Equity Initiative.Google Scholar
Kubinec, Robert. 2023. Making Democracy Safe for Business: Corporate Politics During the Arab Uprisings. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamont, Michèle. 2009. The Dignity of Working Men: Morality and the Boundaries of Race, Class, and Immigration. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lansley, Stewart. 2006. Rich Britain: The Rise and Rise of the New Super-Wealthy. London: Politico.Google Scholar
Larreguy, Horacio, Olea, Cesar Montiel, and Querubin, Pablo. 2017. “Political Brokers: Partisans or Agents? Evidence from the Mexican Teachers’ Union.” American Journal of Political Science 61 (4): 877891.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawson, Chappell, and Greene, Kenneth F.. 2014. “Making Clientelism Work: How Norms of Reciprocity Increase Voter Compliance.” Comparative Politics 47 (1): 6185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leeper, Thomas J., Hobolt, Sara B., and Tilley, James. 2020. “Measuring Subgroup Preferences in Conjoint Experiments.” Political Analysis 28 (2): 207221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lerman, Amy, Sadin, Meredith, and Trachtman, Samuel. 2017. “Policy Uptake as Political Behavior: Evidence from the Affordable Care Act.” American Political Science Review 111 (4): 755770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lindblom, Charles. 1977. Politics and Markets: The World’s Political Economic Systems. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Lodge, Tom. 2014. “Neo-Patrimonial Politics in the ANC.” African Affairs 113 (450): 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Louw, Megan, Van Der Berg, Servaas, and Yu, Derek. 2007. “Convergence of a Kind: Educational Attainment and Intergenerational Social Mobility in South Africa.” South African Journal of Economics 75 (3): 548571.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mail & Guardian (2016). Your guide to the mayoral candidates of Tshwane, Jo’burg and Nelson Mandela Bay. 3 August, 2016. Available here https://bit.ly/3AgQp0h Google Scholar
Majic, Samantha, O’Neill, Daniel, and Bernhard, Michael. 2020. “Celebrity and Politics.” Perspectives on Politics 18 (1): 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mares, Isabela. 2015. From Open Secrets to Secret Voting: Democratic Electoral Reforms and Voter Autonomy. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mares, Isabela, and Young, Lauren. 2016. “Buying, Expropriating, and Stealing Votes.” Annual Review of Political Science 19: 267288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Markus, Stanislav. 2008. “Corporate Governance as Political Insurance: Firm-Level Institutional Creation in Emerging Markets and Beyond.” Socio-Economic Review 6 (1): 6998.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Markus, Stanislav. 2022a. “Russia’s Oligarchs.” In Russian Politics Today: Stability and Fragility, edited by Wengle, Susanne (pp. 270292). New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Markus, Stanislav. 2022b. “Meet Russia’s Oligarchs, A Group Of Men Who Won’t Be Toppling Putin Anytime Soon.” The Conversation. https://theconversation.com/meet-russias-oligarchs-a-group-of-men-who-wont-be-toppling-putin-anytime-soon-178474.Google Scholar
Markus, Stanislav, and Charnysh, Volha. 2017. “The Flexible Few: Oligarchs and Wealth Defense in Developing Democracies.” Comparative Political Studies 50 (12): 16321665.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. David. 2014. Celebrity and Power: Fame in Contemporary Culture. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McMenamin, Iain. 2012. “If Money Talks, What Does It Say? Varieties of Capitalism and Business Financing of Parties.” World Politics 64 (01): 138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Minefee, Ishva, and Bucheli, Marcelo. 2021. “MNC Responses to International NGO Activist Campaigns: Evidence from Royal Dutch/Shell in Apartheid South Africa.” Journal of International Business Studies 52: 971998.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nichter, Simeon. 2008. “Vote Buying or Turnout Buying? Machine Politics and the Secret Ballot.” American Political Science Review 102 (1): 1931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nichter, Simeon. 2014. “Conceptualizing Vote Buying.” Electoral Studies 35: 315327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nichter, Simeon. 2018. Votes for Survival: Relational Clientelism in Latin America. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Onishi, Norimitsu, and Gebrekidan, Selam. 2018. “In Gupta Brothers’ Rise and Fall, the Tale of a Sullied A.N.C.” The New York Times, Dec. 22, 2018.Google Scholar
Page, Benjamin I., Bartels, Larry M., and Seawright, Jason. 2013. “Democracy and the Policy Preferences of Wealthy Americans.” Perspectives on Politics 11 (1): 5173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Page, Benjamin I., Seawright, Jason, and Lacombe, Matthew J.. 2018. Billionaires and Stealth Politics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piketty, Thomas. 2014. Capital in the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Plagerson, Sophie, Patel, Leila, Hochfeld, Tessa, and Ulriksen, Marianne S.. 2019. “Social Policy in South Africa: Navigating the Route to Social Development.” World Development 113: 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plaut, Martin. 2014. “South Africa: How the ANC Wins Elections.” Review of African Political Economy 41 (142): 634644.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Polanyi, Karl. 1944. The great Transformation. Boston: Beacon press.Google Scholar
Phongpaichit, Pasuk, and Baker, Christopher. 2004. Thaksin: The Business of Politics in Thailand. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Press. Google Scholar
Radnitz, Scott. 2010. Weapons of the Wealthy: Predatory Regimes and Elite-Led Protests in Central Asia. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Roberts, Andrew. 2019. “Czech Billionaires as Politicians.” Problems of Post-Communism 66 (6): 434444.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, James A., and Verdier, Thierry. 2013. “The Political Economy of Clientelism.” The Scandinavian Journal of Economics 115 (2): 260291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rowlingson, Karen, Sood, Amrita, and Tu, Trinh. 2021. “Public Attitudes to a Wealth Tax: The Importance of ‘Capacity to Pay’.” Fiscal Studies 42 (3-4): 431455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schulz-Herzenberg, Collette. 2019. “The Decline of Partisan Voting and the Rise in Electoral Uncertainty in South Africa’s 2019 General Elections.” Politikon 46 (4): 462480.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schweinberger, Tanja. 2022. “How Promise Breaking in Trade Rhetoric Shapes Attitudes Toward Bilateral US-China Trade Coorperation.” Business and Politics 24: 463490.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seekings, Jeremy, and Nattrass., Nicoli 2005. Class, Race, and Inequality in South Africa. New Haven: Yale University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sil, Rudra, and Samuelson, Kate. 2018. “Anatomy of a Massacre: The Roots of Heightened Labour Militancy in South Africa’s Platinum Belt.” Economy and Society 47 (3): 403427.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solt, Frederick. 2008. “Economic Inequality and Democratic Political Engagement.” American Journal of Political Science 52 (1): 4860.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Southall, Roger. 2008. “The ANC for Sale? Money, Morality & Business in South Africa.” Review of African Political Economy 35 (116): 281299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Southall, Roger. 2013. Liberation Movements in Power: Party & State in Southern Africa. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stokes, Susan C. 2005. “Perverse Accountability: A Formal Model of Machine Politics with Evidence from Argentina.” American Political Science Review 99 (3): 315325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stokes, Susan C., Dunning, Thad, Nazareno, Marcelo, and Brusco, Valeria. 2013. Brokers, Voters, and Clientelism: The Puzzle of Distributive Politics. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Szakonyi, David. 2020. Politics for Profit: Business, Elections, and Policymaking in Russia. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teer-Tomaselli, Ruth, Wasserman, Herman, and De Beer, Arnold. 2007. “South Africa as a Regional Media Power.” In Media on the Move: Global Flow and Contra-Flow, edited by Daya Kishan Thussu. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Truex, Rory. 2014. “The Returns to Office in a “Rubber Stamp” Parliament.” American Political Science Review 108 (02): 235251.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, Darrell M., and Orman, John M.. 2003. Celebrity Politics. Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Williams, Joan C. 2017. White Working Class: Overcoming Class Cluelessness in America. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business Press.Google Scholar
Winters, Jeffrey. 2011. Oligarchy. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winters, Jeffrey. 2013. “Oligarchy and Democracy in Indonesia.” Indonesia (96): 1133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woller, Anders, Gerner Hariri, Jacob, and Justesen, Mogens K.. 2023. “The Cost of Voting and the Cost of Votes”, The Journal of Politics 85(2), 593608.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Bank. 2022. Inequality in Southern Africa. Washinton, D.C.: The World Bank. https://bit.ly/3bKoTOO Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Survey experimental vignettes

Figure 1

Table 2. Predictors of tycoon support

Figure 2

Figure 1. Mechanisms of support across tycoon candidates.Note: The dots represent coefficients (marginal effects) from OLS regressions. The dependent variable is candidate support (scaled 0–100). The dashed lines are 95% confidence intervals. Treatment groups are shown on the y-axis. Marginal effects are estimated relative to the baseline tycoon category (see Table 1). n=1435.

Figure 3

Figure 2. Treatment effects and living standards.Note: The plots show the marginal effect of the treatments conditional on levels of living standards (scaled 0–12). The dependent variable is candidate support (scaled 0–100). Estimates are from OLS regressions. All models include the full set of covariate controls used for balance testing (see Appendix D). The solid line represents marginal effects of the treatment conditional on levels of living standards. The estimated marginal effects are shown on the right y-axis. The dashed vertical lines are 95% confidence intervals. The gray-shaded histogram shows the distribution of the living standards measure in percent (along the left y-axis). Low/high values of living standards are given by low/high values on the x-axis. n=1360.

Figure 4

Figure 3. Treatment effects and racial group.Note: The plots show the marginal effect of the treatments conditional racial group affiliation. The dependent variable is candidate support (scaled 0–100). All models include the full set of covariate controls used for balance testing (see Appendix D). Following South African official classifications, racial groups are defined as black, colored (mixed racial affiliation), or white. The gray-shaded histogram shows the distribution of racial groups in percent (along the left y-axis). For other details, see notes to Figure 2. n=1360.

Supplementary material: File

Justesen and Markus supplementary material

Justesen and Markus supplementary material
Download Justesen and Markus supplementary material(File)
File 556.4 KB