Losers’ Consent in Changing Welfare States: Output Dissatisfaction, Experienced Voice and Political Distrust
Publication date
2022-11
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Abstract
Mature welfare states must increasingly handle growing fiscal pressures and a multitude of needs with smaller resources. Meanwhile, evaluations of policy outputs are characterized as ‘the weakest link’ in welfare state support, resulting in generalized political distrust. We assess the procedural fairness argument that citizens are not only concerned with welfare state outcomes but also assess the fairness of the processes of service delivery. The fairness perspective has usually been tested in cross-sectional studies, experiments or on the ‘input side’ of democracy. By contrast, we use primary three-wave panel data on evaluations and experiences with welfare state institutions. The random-effects within-between framework allows improved causal evidence that both outputs (service quality satisfaction) and procedural fairness (experienced voice opportunities) affect political trust. Crucially, however, perceived fairness mitigates detrimental effects of poor outcomes. This is because procedural voice matters, especially for the formation of political trust among losers.
Keywords
political trust, procedural fairness, welfare state, Sociology and Political Science, SDG 1 - No Poverty, SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
Citation
Blok, L D & Kumlin, S 2022, 'Losers’ Consent in Changing Welfare States: Output Dissatisfaction, Experienced Voice and Political Distrust', Political Studies, vol. 70, no. 4, pp. 867-886. https://doi.org/10.1177/0032321721993646