Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The poorer you are, the more you trust? The effect of inequality and income on institutional trust in East-Central Europe

View through Europeana Collections
Compared to Western Europe, the new democracies of East-Central Europe (ECE) demonstrate substantially lower levels of institutional trust. Because trust in state institutions is an indicator of the public approval and legitimacy of a political system, low trust levels are a cause for concern. The paper addresses a particular aspect of this broad issue by focusing on how country-level wealth and inequality and individual-level economic situation and sociotropic evaluations affect institutional trust in ECE in comparison with Western Europe. A multi-level analysis performed on the 2010 European Social Survey dataset reveals that substantial differences exist between the two sides of the continent. While sociotropic measures show a uniformly strong, positive association with institutional trust, the marginal effect of relative income is positive in Western but negative in East-Central Europe. Moreover, although social inequality is inversely related to institutional trust, four ECE countries (the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia), where relatively low inequality is accompanied by low levels of institutional trust, deviate from the general trend. The paper suggests that the causes of these differences may be attributed to the interplay between specific characteristics of ECE political economies and the strongly egalitarian attitudes of East-Central European citizens.
Library of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Title: The poorer you are, the more you trust? The effect of inequality and income on institutional trust in East-Central Europe
Description:
Compared to Western Europe, the new democracies of East-Central Europe (ECE) demonstrate substantially lower levels of institutional trust.
Because trust in state institutions is an indicator of the public approval and legitimacy of a political system, low trust levels are a cause for concern.
The paper addresses a particular aspect of this broad issue by focusing on how country-level wealth and inequality and individual-level economic situation and sociotropic evaluations affect institutional trust in ECE in comparison with Western Europe.
A multi-level analysis performed on the 2010 European Social Survey dataset reveals that substantial differences exist between the two sides of the continent.
While sociotropic measures show a uniformly strong, positive association with institutional trust, the marginal effect of relative income is positive in Western but negative in East-Central Europe.
Moreover, although social inequality is inversely related to institutional trust, four ECE countries (the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia), where relatively low inequality is accompanied by low levels of institutional trust, deviate from the general trend.
The paper suggests that the causes of these differences may be attributed to the interplay between specific characteristics of ECE political economies and the strongly egalitarian attitudes of East-Central European citizens.

Related Results

Measuring the Spatial Dimension of Regional Inequality: An Approach Based on the Gini Correlation Measure
Measuring the Spatial Dimension of Regional Inequality: An Approach Based on the Gini Correlation Measure
Abstract Traditional inequality measures fail to capture the geographical distribution of income. The failure to consider such distribution implies that, holding income constant, d...
A simple method for estimating the Lorenz curve
A simple method for estimating the Lorenz curve
AbstractGiven many popular functional forms for the Lorenz curve do not have a closed-form expression for the Gini index and no study has utilized the observed Gini index to estima...
Does Financial Development Reduce the Poverty Gap?
Does Financial Development Reduce the Poverty Gap?
AbstractFinancial development may affect poverty directly and indirectly through its impact on income inequality, economic growth, and financial instability. Previous studies do no...
Effects of Income Inequality on Satisfaction in Life Perceived by Female Fishermen — Focused on the Mediating Effect of Depression
Effects of Income Inequality on Satisfaction in Life Perceived by Female Fishermen — Focused on the Mediating Effect of Depression
The purpose of this study is to examine the mediating effects of depression in the relationship between income inequality and satisfaction in life perceived by female fishermen. To...
On Exponential Convergence Conditions of an Extended Projection Neural Network
On Exponential Convergence Conditions of an Extended Projection Neural Network
Recently the extended projection neural network was proposed to solve constrained monotone variational inequality problems and a class of constrained nonmonotontic variational ineq...

Back to Top