Gasoline prices and presidential approval ratings of the United States
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Publisher
Sage
Abstract
We use random forests, a machine-learning technique, to formally examine the link between real gasoline prices and presidential approval ratings of the United States (US). Random forests make it possible to study this link in a completely data-driven way, such that nonlinearities in the data can easily be detected and a large number of control variables, in line with the extant literature, can be considered. Our empirical findings show that the link between real gasoline prices and the presidential approval ratings is indeed nonlinear, and that the former even has predictive value in an out-of-sample exercise for the latter. We argue that our findings are in line with the so-called pocketbook mechanism, which stipulates that the presidential approval ratings depend on gasoline prices because the latter have sizable impact on personal economic situations of voters.
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Keywords
Presidential approval ratings, Gasoline price, Random forests, Forecasting, United States (US)
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-08: Decent work and economic growth
Citation
Gupta, R., Pierdzioch, C., & Tiwari, A. K. (2025). Gasoline Prices and Presidential Approval Ratings of the United States. American Politics Research, 53(5), 469-480. https://doi.org/10.1177/1532673X251325458.