Wishful thinking in response to events: evidence from the 2021 German federal election
Wishful thinking in response to events: evidence from the 2021 German federal election
When making uncertain judgments about the political future, people consistently see desired outcomes as more likely. But when major events reduce uncertainty about what is possible in the future, how do people's expectations respond? In a panel study conducted during the 2021 German federal election, we find that citizens' predictions of likely coalitions converge after the election takes place, but even after this convergence those expectations remain marked by significant partisan gaps. The election result substantially reduces uncertainty about coalition formation—decreasing, but far from eliminating, differences in expectations between groups with different preferences. Our findings provide a clear case of static wishful thinking (contemporaneous association between preferences and expectations) without dynamic wishful thinking (divergence over time in expectations in line with preferences), suggesting that citizens' expectations of the future, regardless of their prior commitments, respond accordingly to events, but wishful thinking persists even in contexts of dramatically reduced uncertainty.
Coalitions, Expectations, Updating, Wishful thinking
Barnfield, Matthew
0434519e-d85d-42e9-8e07-0b90f1bf80df
Phillips, Joseph
b201eb2a-db65-4d25-9561-1195c1c028b8
Stoeckel, Florian
ca82e601-5b0f-4f51-9b2d-46a1693e1f25
Merola, Vittorio
3a0f1d8e-ee5d-4b08-a959-8a4fbf318acf
Stöckli, Sabrina
7a440aed-0755-4e6c-b233-360ea0533b68
Lyons, Benjamin
562d35bb-6be0-4e08-8663-0cc28bfa0063
Thompson, Jack
4080e1aa-ddeb-4ee0-919f-570d5889e2f7
Szewach, Paula
2a68634d-501d-4fa9-a707-c9771159e868
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
8 May 2025
Barnfield, Matthew
0434519e-d85d-42e9-8e07-0b90f1bf80df
Phillips, Joseph
b201eb2a-db65-4d25-9561-1195c1c028b8
Stoeckel, Florian
ca82e601-5b0f-4f51-9b2d-46a1693e1f25
Merola, Vittorio
3a0f1d8e-ee5d-4b08-a959-8a4fbf318acf
Stöckli, Sabrina
7a440aed-0755-4e6c-b233-360ea0533b68
Lyons, Benjamin
562d35bb-6be0-4e08-8663-0cc28bfa0063
Thompson, Jack
4080e1aa-ddeb-4ee0-919f-570d5889e2f7
Szewach, Paula
2a68634d-501d-4fa9-a707-c9771159e868
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Barnfield, Matthew, Phillips, Joseph, Stoeckel, Florian, Merola, Vittorio, Stöckli, Sabrina, Lyons, Benjamin, Thompson, Jack, Szewach, Paula and Reifler, Jason
(2025)
Wishful thinking in response to events: evidence from the 2021 German federal election.
Electoral Studies, 95, [102940].
(doi:10.1016/j.electstud.2025.102940).
Abstract
When making uncertain judgments about the political future, people consistently see desired outcomes as more likely. But when major events reduce uncertainty about what is possible in the future, how do people's expectations respond? In a panel study conducted during the 2021 German federal election, we find that citizens' predictions of likely coalitions converge after the election takes place, but even after this convergence those expectations remain marked by significant partisan gaps. The election result substantially reduces uncertainty about coalition formation—decreasing, but far from eliminating, differences in expectations between groups with different preferences. Our findings provide a clear case of static wishful thinking (contemporaneous association between preferences and expectations) without dynamic wishful thinking (divergence over time in expectations in line with preferences), suggesting that citizens' expectations of the future, regardless of their prior commitments, respond accordingly to events, but wishful thinking persists even in contexts of dramatically reduced uncertainty.
Text
Electoral Studies-expectations-accepted-ms-PURE-upload
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
1-s2.0-S0261379425000460-main
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 25 April 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 May 2025
Published date: 8 May 2025
Keywords:
Coalitions, Expectations, Updating, Wishful thinking
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 502735
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502735
ISSN: 0261-3794
PURE UUID: e524f968-705a-4598-8426-5fc72a95f207
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 07 Jul 2025 16:47
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Matthew Barnfield
Author:
Joseph Phillips
Author:
Florian Stoeckel
Author:
Vittorio Merola
Author:
Sabrina Stöckli
Author:
Benjamin Lyons
Author:
Jack Thompson
Author:
Paula Szewach
Author:
Jason Reifler
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics