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Influence, affluence and media salience: economic resources and lobbying influence in the European Union

Journal Contribution - e-publication

This paper evaluates the circumstances under which affluent interest groups wield influence over policy outcomes. Interest group scholarship is ambiguous about the beneficial role of economic resources for lobbying influence. Economically resourceful groups are often presumed to provide more and better expert information to decision-makers and, in exchange, receive more favourable policy concessions. We argue that the beneficial role of economic resources is contingent on the media salience of policy dossiers. We expect that resourceful groups are more influential when issues are discussed behind the public scenes, while their competitive advantage dampens once issues grow salient in the news media. We test our expectations in the context of European Union policymaking, drawing from 183 expert surveys with lobbyists connected to a sample of 41 policy issues. Our empirical findings demonstrate that economic resources matter for lobbying influence, but that their effect is conditional on the media salience of policy issues.
Journal: European Union politics
ISSN: 1465-1165
Volume: 99
Pages: 1 - 23
Publication year:2020
Keywords:A1 Journal article
BOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:2
CSS-citation score:1
Authors:International
Accessibility:Open