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Replication Data for: Government Performance and Democracy: Survey Experimental Evidence from 12 Countries during Covid-19

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Replication Data for: Government Performance and Democracy: Survey Experimental Evidence from 12 Countries during Covid-19
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HBH799
 
Creator Becher, Michael
Longuet Marx, Nicolas
Pons, Vincent
Brouard, Sylvain
Galasso, Vincenzo
Kerrouche, Eric
León Alfonso, Sandra
Stegmueller, Daniel
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description Crises of the magnitude of the Covid-19 pandemic may plausibly affect deep-seated attitudes of a large fraction of citizens. In particular, outcome-oriented theories imply that leaders' performance in response to such adverse events shapes people’s views about the government and about democracy. To assess these causal linkages empirically, we use a pre-registered survbey experiment covering 12 countries and 22,500 respondents during the pandemic. Our design enables us to leverage exogenous variation in evaluations of policies and leaders with an instrumental variables strategy. We find that people use information on both health and economic performance when evaluating the government. In turn, dissatisfaction with the government decreases satisfaction with how democracy works, but it does not increase support for non-democratic alternatives. The results suggests that comparatively bad government performance mainly spurs internal critiques of democracy.
 
Subject Social Sciences
democracy, democratic dissatisfaction, public health, economy, Covid-19, survey experiment
 
Date 2023-11-15
 
Contributor Longuet Marx, Nicolas