At the large scale, the political history of democracies is totally dominated by popular correlation-causation errors. ...
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Replying to @Outsideness
... It's musical chairs with the business cycle, most clearly. A party that finds itself standing (in power) when the music stops is toast.
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Replying to @Outsideness
... A couple of interesting examples here:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/pavlostsimas/a-greek-tragedy-in-a-span_b_9201214.html …
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Replying to @Outsideness
@Outsideness but does that "political history" (which party gains and loses) actually affect anything else, beyond the micro scale?1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @anomalyuk
@anomalyuk Welfare systems, once entrenched, are the ultimate ratchets. Is that process party-political sensitive? I would have thought so.1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
@Outsideness It's plausible, but not easily proved. Long periods of bipartisan consensus. Lots of abrupt corrections/overreactions. Chaotic.
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