Crisis of Trust: Socio-Economic Determinants of Europeans' Confidence in Government

42 Pages Posted: 18 Apr 2017 Last revised: 18 Sep 2017

See all articles by Chase Foster

Chase Foster

SOAS University of London; Munich School of Public Policy at the Technical University of Munich

Jeffry Frieden

Harvard University

Date Written: April 17, 2017

Abstract

Europeans’ confidence in political institutions has dropped precipitously since the onset of the Euro-crisis in 2010. However, the decline in public trust in government varies tremendously across countries and occupational and educational groups. Analyzing more than 600,000 responses from 23 waves of the Eurobarometer conducted from 2004-2015, we find that economic factors explain much of the cross-national and over-time variation. The baseline level of trust is influenced greatly by a person’s position in the labor market: across European countries, citizens with more education and higher levels of skills express more trust in government than those educational and occupational groups that have benefited less from European integration. The acute decline in the level of public trust in the past decade also has strong economic foundations. Residents of debtor countries that have seen unemployment rates skyrocket in recent years are now much less likely to trust national government than those in creditor countries that have fared better during the economic crisis, while the unemployed have lost faith in government to a greater degree than other parts of the population. Cultural, ideational, and political factors remain important for baseline levels of trust, but on their own they cannot explain the acute, asymmetrical decline in citizen trust observed over the last decade.

Suggested Citation

Foster, Chase and Frieden, Jeffry, Crisis of Trust: Socio-Economic Determinants of Europeans' Confidence in Government (April 17, 2017). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2953951 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2953951

Chase Foster (Contact Author)

SOAS University of London ( email )

Thornhaugh Street
Russell Square
London, WC1H 0XG
United Kingdom

Munich School of Public Policy at the Technical University of Munich ( email )

Richard-Wagner-Straße 1
Munich, 80333
Germany

Jeffry Frieden

Harvard University ( email )

1737 Cambridge Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States

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