2 Number and share of referendums and ballot dates
2.1 National referendums and ballot dates per decade
Figure 2.1 shows the number of national referendums per decade from 1790 until today. The number of referendums fluctuated at low levels in the 19th century. In the 20th century, it has increased steadily from around 50 in the decade from 1900 to 1909 to over 600 in the decade from 1990 to 1999. Since then, the number has decreased to a bit more than 400 per decade from 2010 to 2019. In total, 3061 referendums have been held worldwide since 1790.
In the second graph, we can also see that once we exclude Switzerland (CH) and Liechtenstein (LI) from the analysis, the number of referendums worldwide since 1790 is reduced to 2267. Nevertheless, the general trends are the same: Having omitted Switzerland and Liechtenstein, we see a peak at around 500 referendums in the 1990ies, with a bit of a decline since then.
Looking at ballot dates, the picture is more evened-out, but the general trends are similar. There is an increase to a peak of around 250 ballot dates in the decade from 1990 to 1999, with a small decrease for the decades afterwards. Excluding Switzerland and Liechtenstein, the pattern ist the same but the total number of ballot dates is reduced from 1608 to 1197.
2.3 Top-ten analysis
Looking at the top-ten countries with the most referendums, we see that Switzerland held by far the most referendums since 1900, followed by New Zealand and Liechtenstein. Looking at ballot dates, Switzerland is still the lone frontrunner, with Liechtenstein coming in second and New Zealand third. It becomes apparent from Figure 2.3, that only ten countries are responsible for half the referendums and a third of all ballot dates worldwide since 1900.
2.4 Population size and ballot dates per country
With regard to referendums, there has been an ongoing debate on whether countries with smaller populations hold referendums more often than countries with larger populations. In line with the findings of Anckar (2004) and Vatter (2000), the analysis in Figure 2.4 shows that there is no correlation between a country’s population size (data by The World Bank (2023)) and its number of ballot dates per decade. Without the exception of a few outliers, mainly from Switzerland and Liechtenstein, we don’t observe more referendums (y-axis) in countries with a small population (x-axis). In fact, even larger countries can have a relatively high number of referendums per decade, e.g. Egypt in the 1970s.