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Does being ‘left behind’ corrode government legitimacy? Tax morale and economic stress

Does being ‘left behind’ corrode government legitimacy? Tax morale and economic stress
Does being ‘left behind’ corrode government legitimacy? Tax morale and economic stress

By now we are familiar with studies which tie being ‘left behind’ to voter support for populist or other extreme views. In the UK case, this is seen in support for Brexit but can also apply to support of parties such as UKIP (e.g. Bolet, 2021; Ford and Goodwin, 2014). Comparative studies show that electoral support for populist parties in part reflects lowered trust in mainstream politics (e.g. Geurkink et al., 2020; Keefer et al., 2021; Mauk, 2020), which is seen as a behavioural indicator of slipping legitimacy. Political support for populist movements is interpreted as declining legitimacy of existing governments, and that decline is seen as being tied to economic stress and the ‘left behind’ areas. In this article, we ask whether economics stresses also have impact upon another and possibly more direct measure of government legitimacy – tax morale.

constituency context, economic voting, legitimacy, political behaviour, public opinion, ‘left behind’
1369-1481
Bowler, Shaun
0f383980-551c-4979-b392-e573ac07e505
Johns, Rob
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35
Bowler, Shaun
0f383980-551c-4979-b392-e573ac07e505
Johns, Rob
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35

Bowler, Shaun and Johns, Rob (2024) Does being ‘left behind’ corrode government legitimacy? Tax morale and economic stress. The British Journal of Politics and International Relations. (doi:10.1177/13691481241227835).

Record type: Article

Abstract

By now we are familiar with studies which tie being ‘left behind’ to voter support for populist or other extreme views. In the UK case, this is seen in support for Brexit but can also apply to support of parties such as UKIP (e.g. Bolet, 2021; Ford and Goodwin, 2014). Comparative studies show that electoral support for populist parties in part reflects lowered trust in mainstream politics (e.g. Geurkink et al., 2020; Keefer et al., 2021; Mauk, 2020), which is seen as a behavioural indicator of slipping legitimacy. Political support for populist movements is interpreted as declining legitimacy of existing governments, and that decline is seen as being tied to economic stress and the ‘left behind’ areas. In this article, we ask whether economics stresses also have impact upon another and possibly more direct measure of government legitimacy – tax morale.

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Accepted/In Press date: 4 January 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 February 2024
Keywords: constituency context, economic voting, legitimacy, political behaviour, public opinion, ‘left behind’

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488721
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488721
ISSN: 1369-1481
PURE UUID: 0733c722-3f03-45ff-a55a-40dc082619f5
ORCID for Rob Johns: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4543-7463

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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2024 16:57
Last modified: 19 Apr 2024 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Shaun Bowler
Author: Rob Johns ORCID iD

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