Numerous studies show that ruling parties paid a political price for the recent economic crisis. Yet the degree to which the mostaffected households held the government accountable for their personal economic misfortune during the crisis remains an open question. Survey data from 21 countries in Europe and Central Asia show that individuals whose income was adversely affected by the crisis, who had to curtail spending to make ends meet, or who tried to increase their income were more likely to disapprove of incumbent governments than were those who were less directly affected. Panel data from the Netherlands confirms that drops in income during the crisis led to lower levels of government support. While politicians were held accountable for the crisis generally, households that suffered economic pain held their governments accountable for their losses.
CITATION STYLE
Singer, M. (2018). Personal economic struggles and heterogeneous government approval after the great recession. Public Opinion Quarterly, 82(3), 524–552. https://doi.org/10.1093/poq/nfy039
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