Perceived government autonomy, economic evaluations, and political support during the Eurozone crisis
Perceived government autonomy, economic evaluations, and political support during the Eurozone crisis
The Eurozone crisis and resulting economic interventions present a particular manifestation of the dilemma between globalisation and national democracy, one in which supranational involvement led to an unprecedented reduction in democratic governance. This has been linked to an erosion in support for the domestic political system, but the precise mechanism is still debated. This article tests two mechanisms proposed in the recent literature: firstly, that citizens perceived that their domestic system’s autonomy was constrained by the economic interventions, which led citizens to reduce their support for the domestic system; secondly, that the decline was due to worsening economic evaluations. This article tests these arguments together at the individual level for the first time using a multilevel analysis of European Election Study data, and replicates the results with a case study of Portugal. The analysis finds no support for the autonomy argument, but instead points to the crucial role of economic evaluations.
Devine, Daniel
6bfa5a27-1b58-4c61-8eb0-a7a40860a4ae
Devine, Daniel
6bfa5a27-1b58-4c61-8eb0-a7a40860a4ae
Devine, Daniel
(2019)
Perceived government autonomy, economic evaluations, and political support during the Eurozone crisis.
West European Politics.
(doi:10.1080/01402382.2019.1675130).
Abstract
The Eurozone crisis and resulting economic interventions present a particular manifestation of the dilemma between globalisation and national democracy, one in which supranational involvement led to an unprecedented reduction in democratic governance. This has been linked to an erosion in support for the domestic political system, but the precise mechanism is still debated. This article tests two mechanisms proposed in the recent literature: firstly, that citizens perceived that their domestic system’s autonomy was constrained by the economic interventions, which led citizens to reduce their support for the domestic system; secondly, that the decline was due to worsening economic evaluations. This article tests these arguments together at the individual level for the first time using a multilevel analysis of European Election Study data, and replicates the results with a case study of Portugal. The analysis finds no support for the autonomy argument, but instead points to the crucial role of economic evaluations.
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Accepted/In Press date: 1 January 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 October 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 435730
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/435730
ISSN: 0140-2382
PURE UUID: 609c6c55-bacf-4550-886a-c0dae6d8568c
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Date deposited: 19 Nov 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:03
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Daniel Devine
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