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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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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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dismantling the Welfare State? Reagan, Thatcher, and the Politics of Retrenchment

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown how to find a user's guide to operate a product on the web. But this is not a good way to obtain details about operating certain products.
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How Elastic Are Preferences for Redistribution? Evidence from Randomized Survey Experiments

TL;DR: This article analyzed randomized online survey experiments providing interactive, customized information on US income inequality, the link between top income tax rates and economic growth, and the estate tax, finding that the treatment has large effects on views about inequality but only slightly moves tax and transfer policy preferences.
Journal ArticleDOI

The trade origins of economic nationalism: import competition and voting behavior in Western Europe

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of globalization on electoral outcomes in 15 Western European countries over 1988-2007 was investigated, using both official election results at the district level and individual level.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Self‐interest, Social Beliefs, and Attitudes to Redistribution. Re‐addressing the Issue of Cross‐national Variation

TL;DR: The authors identify cross-country differences in the social bases of support for redistribution that confirm predictions of welfare-state scholarship and find additional cross-national variation when examining whether popular support for redistributions is related to beliefs about social mobility.
Journal Article

Self-Interest, Social Beliefs and Attitudes to Redistribution

TL;DR: The authors identify cross-country differences in the social bases of support for redistribution that confirm predictions of welfare-state scholarship, finding that the gap between married and unmarried people is unimportant in universalist regimes; the insider/outsider cleavage is more important in conservative and specific skills systems; class matters more in liberal regimes.
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Rich State, Poor State, Red State, Blue State: What's the Matter with Connecticut?

TL;DR: This paper found that income matters more in "red America" than in "blue America" and that rich people are much more likely than poor people to vote for the Republican presidential candidate, but in rich states (such as Connecticut), income has a very low correlation with vote preference.
Journal ArticleDOI

Costly Jobs: Trade-related Layoffs, Government Compensation, and Voting in U.S. Elections

TL;DR: This article found that voters were substantially more sensitive to the loss of local jobs when it resulted from foreign competition, particularly from offshoring, than to job losses caused by other factors, and the anti-incumbent effect of trade-related job losses was smaller in areas where the government certified more of the harmed workers to receive special job training and income assistance.
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