Forecasting Elections in Europe: Synthetic Models
Lewis-Beck, M.S. & Dassonneville, R. (2015). Forecasting Elections in Europe: Synthetic Models. Research and Politics, Jan 2015, 2(1).
Lewis-Beck, M.S. & Dassonneville, R. (2015). Forecasting Elections in Europe: Synthetic Models. Research and Politics, Jan 2015, 2(1).
Scientific work on national election forecasting has become most developed for the United States case, where three dominant approaches can be identified: Structuralists, Aggregators, and Synthesizers. For European cases, election forecasting models remain almost exclusively Structuralist. Here we join together structural modeling and aggregate polling results, to form a hybrid, which we label a Synthetic Model. This model contains a political economy core, to which poll numbers are added (to tap omitted variables). We apply this model to a sample of three Western European countries: Germany, Ireland, and the United Kingdom. This combinatory strategy appears to offer clear forecasting gains, in terms of lead and accuracy.
This content has been updated on 14 October 2016 at 22 h 06 min.