TÓTH, Michal, Miroslav NEMČOK and Peter SPÁČ. Voters' Perception of Pork-Barrel Politics: Evidence from Survey Experiments in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. In International Society of Political Psychology 2019 Annual Meeting, Lisbon. 2019.
Other formats:   BibTeX LaTeX RIS
Basic information
Original name Voters' Perception of Pork-Barrel Politics: Evidence from Survey Experiments in the Czech Republic and Slovakia
Name (in English) Voters' Perception of Pork-Barrel Politics: Evidence from Survey Experiments in the Czech Republic and Slovakia
Authors TÓTH, Michal, Miroslav NEMČOK and Peter SPÁČ.
Edition International Society of Political Psychology 2019 Annual Meeting, Lisbon, 2019.
Other information
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Keywords in English Pork-Barrel, Survey Experiment, Public Opinion, Voting Behaviour, Representation
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Michal Tóth, Ph.D., učo 256042. Changed: 17/7/2019 11:32.
Abstract
Effective and fair redistribution of public resources is seen as one of the key elements of a well-functioning democracy. In the real world, however, it turns out that resources are often allocated neither effectively nor equitably, and that the impartial allocation of public finances serves as a tool for securing votes and re-election. Despite compelling evidence for pork-barrel patterns in distributive politics, little is known about voters’ perception of this inherently unfair effort. Existing findings are not only limited but also contradictory – voters can perceive such strategy both positively and negatively – while data is gathered entirely in the Western countries with a long democratic tradition. We aim to contribute to these findings with patterns present in Central Europe, for which a higher degree of clientelism and corruption is characteristic. Thus, we conducted two survey experiments – in Slovakia and the Czech Republic – both of them using a representative sample of the population. Research design allowed us to manipulate with two main factors – (1) fairness of the distribution and (2) profit for the respondent – in order to study how they influence the support for a decision-maker responsible for the redistribution. While controlling for other relevant aspects (e.g., framing, policy saliency, and the administration level at which the finances are reallocated), we conclude that once voters realize their profit from the pork-barrel politics, they tend to be less critical towards unfairness embedded in the mechanism of redistribution.
Links
GA18-16928S, research and development projectName: Distributivní politika ve střední Evropě
Investor: Czech Science Foundation
PrintDisplayed: 30/9/2024 21:13