The Health of Democracies during the Pandemic: Results from a Randomized Survey Experiment

Author:

Alsan Marcella1,Braghieri Luca2,Eichmeyer Sarah3,Kim Minjeong Joyce4,Stantcheva Stefanie5,Yang David Y.5

Affiliation:

1. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University (email: )

2. Department of Decision Sciences, Bocconi University (email: )

3. Department of Economics, Bocconi University (email: )

4. Department of Economics, University of Michigan (email: )

5. Department of Economics, Harvard University (email: )

Abstract

Concerns have been raised about the “demise of democracy,” possibly accelerated by pandemic-related restrictions. Using a survey experiment involving 8,206 respondents from 5 Western democracies, we find that subjects randomly exposed to information regarding civil liberties infringements undertaken by China and South Korea to contain COVID-19 became less willing to sacrifice rights and more worried about their long-term erosion. However, our treatment did not increase support for democratic procedures more generally despite our prior evidence that pandemic-related health risks diminished such support. These results suggest that the start of the COVID-19 crisis was a particularly vulnerable time for democracies.

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

General Medicine

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