Unemployment, Trust in Government and Satisfaction with Democracy: An Empirical Investigation
Bauer, P. C. (2018). Unemployment, Trust in Government, and Satisfaction with Democracy: An Empirical Investigation. Socius. Doi.org/10.1177/2378023117750533
Posted: 6 Sep 2017 Last revised: 9 Jan 2020
Date Written: November 22, 2017
Abstract
Evidence suggests that unemployment negatively affects various aspects of individuals’ lives. The author investigates whether unemployment changes individuals’ political evaluations in the form of trust in government and satisfaction with democracy. While most research in this area operates on the macro level, the author provides individual-level evidence. In doing so, the author investigates the assumed causal link with panel data from Switzerland and the Netherlands. In addition, the author studies the impact on life satisfaction, a “control outcome,” known to be affected by unemployment. Although there is strong evidence that changes in employment status do affect life satisfaction, effects on trust in government and satisfaction with democracy seem mostly absent or negligible in size.
Keywords: Unemployment, Political Trust, Regime Satisfaction, Satisfaction with Democracy, Life Satisfaction
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