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Journal ArticleDOI

Explaining Social Policy Preferences: Evidence from the Great Recession

Yotam Margalit
- 01 Feb 2013 - 
- Vol. 107, Iss: 01, pp 80-103
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TLDR
This paper found that the personal experience of economic hardship, particularly the loss of a job, had a major effect on increasing support for welfare spending, and this effect was appreciably larger among Republicans than among Democrats.
Abstract
To what extent do personal circumstances, as compared to ideological dispositions, drive voters’ preferences on welfare policy? Addressing this question is difficult because a person's ideological position can be an outcome of material interest rather than an independent source of preferences. The article deals with this empirical challenge using an original panel study carried out over four years, tracking the labor market experiences and the political attitudes of a national sample of Americans before and after the eruption of the financial crisis. The analysis shows that the personal experience of economic hardship, particularly the loss of a job, had a major effect on increasing support for welfare spending. This effect was appreciably larger among Republicans than among Democrats, a result that was not simply due to a “ceiling effect.” However the large attitudinal shift was short lived, dissipating as individuals’ employment situations improved. The results indicate that the personal experience of an economic shock has a sizable, yet overall transient effect on voters’ social policy preferences.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Religion and aggregate support for redistribution

TL;DR: For example, this paper found that a higher share of Catholics within a region has a positive effect on aggregate support for redistribution, while a high share of Protestants has a negative effect; and the effect of a religious denomination is non-linear and depends on whether or not it has a weak or a strong presence in a region.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dealing with Technological Change: Social Policy Preferences and Institutional Context

TL;DR: In this article , the authors argue that individuals who perceive high levels of technology-related employment risks prefer passive policies like unemployment benefits over active measures like retraining in order to satisfy the need for immediate compensation in the case of job loss.
Journal ArticleDOI

Belief change in times of crisis: Providing facts about COVID-19-induced inequalities closes the partisan divide but fuels intra-partisan polarization about inequality

TL;DR: This paper conducted a survey experiment in the United States and found that information provision increased concerns over economic inequality, support for redistribution, and acknowledgement that COVID-19 has especially hurt the most vulnerable.
Book ChapterDOI

The Impact of Economic Insecurity on Social Capital and Well-Being: An Analysis Across Different Cohorts in Europe

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined how the Great Recession has affected human values, social attitudes and subjective well-being in 24 European countries between 2008 and 2016 and found that the effects are particularly pronounced among the youngest age cohort.
References
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Book

The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion

TL;DR: Zaller as discussed by the authors developed a comprehensive theory to explain how people acquire political information from elites and the mass media and convert it into political preferences, and applied this theory to the dynamics of public opinion on a broad range of subjects, including domestic and foreign policy, trust in government, racial equality, and presidential approval, as well as voting behaviour in U.S. House, Senate and presidential elections.
Journal ArticleDOI

International regimes, transactions, and change: embedded liberalism in the postwar economic order

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the prevailing view of international economic regimes is strictly positivistic in its epistemological orientation and stresses the distribution of material power capabilities in its explanatory logic.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion.

D. Rucinski
- 01 Feb 1994 - 
TL;DR: The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion by John Zaller (1992) as discussed by the authors is a model of mass opinion formation that offers readers an introduction to the prevailing theory of opinion formation.
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