| Literature DB >> 34456450 |
Marc Oliver Rieger1, Mei Wang2.
Abstract
The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic puts countries and their governments in an unprecedented situation. Strong countermeasures have been implemented in most places, but how much do people trust their governments in handling this crisis? Using data from a worldwide survey, conducted between March 20th and April 22nd, 2020, with more than 100,000 participants, we study people's perceptions of government reactions in 57 countries. We find that media freedom reduces government trust directly as well as indirectly via a more negative assessment of government reactions as either insufficient or too strict. Higher level of education is associated with higher government trust and lower tendency to judge government reactions as too extreme. We also find different predictors of perceived insufficient reactions vs. too-extreme reactions. In particular, number of COVID-19 deaths significantly predicts perceived insufficient reactions but is not related to perceived too-extreme reactions. Further survey evidence suggests that conspiracy theory believers tend to perceive government countermeasures as too strict.Entities:
Keywords: Conspiracy theories; Government trust; Lock-down; Media freedom; Perception of government interventions; SARS-Cov2 pandemics; Stringency
Year: 2021 PMID: 34456450 PMCID: PMC8383026 DOI: 10.1007/s11205-021-02772-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Indic Res ISSN: 0303-8300
Hypotheses on relationship between trust, perceived policy responsiveness and other variables
| Too extreme | Insufficient | Government trust | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Too extreme | − (−*) | ||
| Insufficient | − (−*) | ||
| Education | −(−*) | ± ( | |
| Media freedom | + ( | ± (−*) | |
| Conspiracy beliefs | (/) | ||
| Government effectiveness | − (−*) | ||
| Current stringency | − (−*) | ||
| Average stringency | + ( | − (/) | |
| COVID-19 deaths | − (/) | ||
± designates cases in which both directions could be predicted by theory. The empirical relationship is presented in the bracket, where one star (*) represents a significant relationship at .05 level. Slash (/) represents no significant relationship
Descriptive statistics
| Variable | Measurement | Mean | SD | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Government trust | 1(= strongly distrust) to 5(= strongly trust) | 2.98 | 1.5 | 101411 |
Fetzer et al. ( |
| Perceived insufficient reaction | 1(= somewhat insufficient); 2(= not at all sufficient); otherwise 0 | 0.8 | 0.78 | 101411 |
Fetzer et al. ( |
| Perceived too-extreme reaction | 1(= somewhat too extreme); 2(= much too extreme); otherwise 0 | 0.06 | 0.28 | 101411 |
Fetzer et al. ( |
| Perceived insufficient reaction in Germany | 1 (= rather too slow or lax); 2(= far too slow or lax); otherwise 0 | 0.25 | 0.48 | 550 | Surveys by the authors |
| Perceived too-extreme reaction in Germany | 1(= rather too fast or restrictive); 2(= far too fast or restrictive); otherwise 0 | 0.12 | 0.37 | 550 | Surveys by the authors |
| (Self-reported) Health | 1(= poor) to 4(= excellent) | 3.1 | 0.72 | 101411 |
Fetzer et al. ( |
| Conspiracy Total | Aggregate scores of beliefs in seven conspiracy theories. | 10.9 | 3.6 | 455 |
Rieger and He-Ulbricht ( |
| Likelihood of voting AfD (right populist party) | 1(= definitely not) to 6(= definitely yes) | 1.39 | 1.06 | 124 |
Rieger and He-Ulbricht ( |
| Evaluation of government on left-right scale | − 4(= way too left) to | 0.41 | 1.4 | 1626 |
Rieger and He-Ulbricht ( |
| Political interest | 1(= very little) to 5(= very much) | 3.22 | 0.99 | 929 | New data set |
Fig. 1Perceptions of governments by participants from the respective countries, sorted by government trust (from 1 =“strongly distrust” to 5 =“strongly trust”) based on the survey by Fetzer et al. (2020b). Red = reaction much too extreme/not at all sufficient; orange = somewhat too extreme/somewhat insufficient. (Color figure online)
Fig. 2Perceptions of country reactions by participants from the respective countries (from 1 =“very poorly” to 4 =“very well”) and proportion of people considering the reactions too little or too much, based on the Democracy Perception Index survey by DeVeaux and Dölitzsch (2020)
Fig. 3Average stringency on day of survey (x-axis) versus opinion of people in a country that the government measures are not sufficient (y-axis)
Fig. 4Average stringency on day of survey (x-axis) versus opinion of people in a country that the government measures are too extreme (y-axis)
The perception of a too-weak response to the crisis is the strongest factor explaining the trust in the government, even when controlling for the effect of the crisis (number of deaths in the country at time of survey) and a number of other factors. Model 4 is the robustness test (without weighting and omitting the outlier country Mexico)
| Government trust | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perceived insufficient | − 1.144*** | − 1.158*** | − 1.149*** | − 0.904*** |
| reaction | (− 17.73) | (− 11.43) | (− 11.00) | (− 184.16) |
| Perceived too extreme | − 0.558** | − 0.606*** | − 0.579** | − 0.600*** |
| reaction | (− 2.58) | (− 3.28) | (− 2.82) | (− 49.10) |
| Media freedom | − 0.026*** | − 0.012* | ||
| (− 4.86) | (− 2.05) | |||
| Government effectiveness | − 0.020 | 0.008 | ||
| (− 0.36) | (0.09) | |||
| Current stringency | − 0.004 | 0.000 | ||
| (− 0.88) | (0.56) | |||
| Average stringency since | 0.040*** | 0.005** | ||
| the first death | (3.93) | (2.73) | ||
| COVID-19 deaths | − 0.000*** | − 0.000** | ||
| (in thousands) | (− 4.19) | (− 2.70) | ||
| Education | 0.008 | 0.008 | 0.004*** | |
| (0.54) | (0.51) | (4.95) | ||
| Age | 0.01** | 0.009* | 0.003*** | |
| (3.01) | (2.27) | (12.13) | ||
| Female | − 0.292* | − 0.321* | − 0.005 | |
| (− 2.28) | (− 2.26) | (− 0.74) | ||
| Health (self-assessed) | 0.203*** | 0.221** | 0.106*** | |
| (3.32) | (2.56) | (23.51) | ||
| Married | 0.043 | 0.016 | − 0.049*** | |
| (0.32) | (0.11) | (− 7.10) | ||
| Constant | 3.865*** | 3.195*** | 3.633*** | 3.568*** |
| (35.8) | (9.35) | (6.02) | (19.25) | |
| 105057 | 105057 | 100605 | 97605 | |
| Countries | 57 | 57 | 55 | 54 |
| Wald | 333.99 | 332.08 | 635.69 | 34166 |
| Log pseudolikelihood | − 749.17 | − 733.28 | − 636.43 | − 138599 |
*, **, *** correspond to significance on the 5%, 1%, and 0.1% level
Fig. 5Structure equation model. Values represent standardized estimates. Significant paths () are represented in solid lines
Correlations of perceived insufficient/too extreme government reaction with various conspiracy-related items and proportion of subjects having heard about them before. The results of first and second survey are printed one below the other
| Perceived reactions | Heard | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Insufficient | Too extreme | About it | |
| The media want to hide information about the coronavirus from us. | .144*(0.043) | .343**(<0.001) | – |
| .108 (0.09) | .222**(<0.001) | ||
| The hype about corona was only caused by pharmaceutical companies and other groups that benefit from it. | .065(0.361) | .344**(<0.001) | – |
| .088(0.166) | .181**(0.004) | ||
| The virus serves our politicians only as pretext to undermine our basic rights. | .064(0.374) | .399(<0.001) | – |
| .214**(0.001) | .232**(<0.001) | ||
| The US secret service developed the virus and brought it to Wuhan in order to specifically damage China. | .061(0.396) | .043(0.550) | 49% |
| .073(0.254) | .204**(0.01) | 51% | |
| China developed the virus in a laboratory for bio-weapons, from where it spread by accident. | − .008(0.916) | .198**(0.005) | 70% |
| .01(0.876) | .215**(0.01) | 75% | |
| Covid-19 is connected to the expansion of the 5G mobile phone network. | .068(0.345) | .092(0.197) | 49% |
| .141*(0.027) | .047(0.461) | 53% | |
| Pharmaceutical companies in conjunction with Bill Gates started the infection in order to make money with a vaccine they had patented. | .019(0.786) | .176*(0.014) | 43% |
| − .01(0.878) | .950**(<0.001) | 75% | |
| Conspiracies total | .078(0.279) | .307**(<0.001) | |
| .114(0.074) | .315**(<0.001) | ||
Distribution of perception of government reactions among people with and without conspiracy tendencies
| Perception of reaction | First survey | Second survey | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conspiracy tendency | Conspiracy tendency | |||
| No (%) | Yes (%) | No (%) | Yes (%) | |
| Not too strict | 94 | 70 | 92 | 73 |
| Rather too strict | 6 | 26 | 8 | 23 |
| Far too strict | 1 | 4 | 0 | 4 |
| Sum | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
Distribution of conspiracy tendency among people with different perceptions of government reactions
| Not too strict (%) | Rather too strict (%) | Far too strict (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No conspiracy tendency | 79 | 36 | 33 |
| Conspiracy tendency | 22 | 64 | 67 |
| Sum | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| No conspiracy tendency | 80 | 51 | 0 |
| Conspiracy tendency | 20 | 49 | 100 |
| Sum | 100 | 100 | 100 |