Globalization and the Welfare State. Testing the Microfoundations of the Compensation Hypothesis

International Studies Quarterly 54(2): 403-26, 2010

47 Pages Posted: 27 Jan 2015

See all articles by Stefanie Walter

Stefanie Walter

University of Zurich - Institute for Political Science

Date Written: 2010

Abstract

The debate on how globalization affects the welfare state has so far largely neglected to examine the micro-level causal mechanism underlying different macro-level claims. Based on survey data from Switzerland, this paper provides an empirical microfoundation for the so-called compensation hypothesis. It finds that globalization losers are more likely to express feelings of economic insecurity. Such feelings, in turn, increase preferences for welfare state expansion, which in turn increase the likelihood of voting for the Social Democratic Party. The analysis also shows that globalization losers and winners significantly differ with regard to their social policy preferences and their propensity to vote for left parties. The paper is innovative on two counts. First, it uses a number of different and more nuanced indicators measuring individuals’ positions as a beneficiaries or losers of increasing global competition. Second, rather than focusing on a particular part of the causal chain, it tests the entire individual-level causal mechanism implied by the compensation hypothesis.

Suggested Citation

Walter, Stefanie, Globalization and the Welfare State. Testing the Microfoundations of the Compensation Hypothesis (2010). International Studies Quarterly 54(2): 403-26, 2010, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2497398

Stefanie Walter (Contact Author)

University of Zurich - Institute for Political Science ( email )

Dep. of International Relations
Seilergraben 49
CH-8001 Zurich
Switzerland

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
199
Abstract Views
1,040
Rank
332,746
PlumX Metrics