Research Seminar

The politicized pandemic: Ideological polarization and the behavioral response to COVID-19 — David Pipke

15 Mär 2022

Sprecher

David Pipke

Abstract

We investigate the relationship between political attitudes and prosociality in a survey of a representative sample of the U.S. population during the first summer of the COVID-19 pandemic. We find that an experimental measure of prosociality correlates positively with adherence to protective behaviors. Liberal political ideology predicts higher levels of protective behavior than conservative ideology, independently of the differences in prosociality across the two groups. Differences between liberals and conservatives are up to 4.4 times smaller in their behavior than in judging the government’s crisis management. This result suggests that U.S. Americans are more polarized on ideological than behavioral grounds.

hier link zum KWP_2207

Autoren

Gianluca Grimalda (Kiel Institute) — Fabrice Murtin (OECD) — David Pipke — Louis Putterman (Brown University) — Matthias Sutter (Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods, University of Cologne, University of Innsbruck)

Raum

Virtuell über Zoom
Bei Interesse senden Sie bitte eine E-Mail an frank.bickenbach@ifw-kiel.de um einen Zoom-Link zum Seminar zu erhalten.