Constituency Service and Incumbency Advantage
Gary King. 1991.
"Constituency Service and Incumbency Advantage".
British Journal of Political Science, 21, Pp. 119–128.

Abstract
This Note addresses the long-standing discrepancy between scholarly support for the effect of constituency service on incumbency advantage and a large body of contradictory empirical evidence. I show first that many of the methodological problems noticed in past research reduce to a single methodological problem that is readily resolved. The core of this Note then provides among the first systematic empirical evidence for the constituency service hypothesis. Specifically, an extra $10,000 added to the budget of the average state legislator gives this incumbent an additional 1.54 percentage points in the next election (with a 95% confidence interval of 1.14 to 1.94 percentage points).
Harvard Dataverse:
Replication data for: Constituency Service and Incumbency Advantage
See Also
- [Dataset] Replication data for: Constituency Service and Incumbency Advantage
- [Paper] Systemic Consequences of Incumbency Advantage in the U.S. House (1991)
- [Paper] Electoral Responsiveness in U.S. Congressional Elections, 1946-1986 (1989)
- [Paper] How American Politics Ensures Electoral Accountability in Congress (2025)
- [Paper] Estimating Incumbency Advantage Without Bias (1990)