Campaign Contributions from Corporate Executives in Lieu of Political Action Committees

Brian Richter (University of Texas at Austin)
Timothy Werner (University of Texas at Austin)

Abstract: To distance themselves from the specter of special- interests, some Congressional candidates instituted personal bans on campaign contributions from corporate-linked political action committees (PACs). We leverage these to identify how corporate executives adapt their personal campaign contribution patterns in response to restrictions applied only to corporate-linked PACs but not to executives as individuals. In a newly constructed dataset, with 6,803,661 observations, that includes all executive-firm-candidate contribution pairs for active S&P500 firms over an 18-year period, we find that corporate executives increase personal giving to specific candidates in lieu of their corporate-linked PACs in a form of cross-actor substitution among corporate-linked sources of campaign contributions. This finding has important implications for regulatory design in scenarios where cross-actor substitution is possible. Vis-à-vis campaign finance regulation, it suggests that bans on corporate-linked PAC contributions alone cannot prevent corporate-linked money from finding its way into candidates’ campaign coffers.


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