Working paper

Diffusing Political Concerns: How Unemployment Information passed between social Ties Influence Danish Voters

James E. Alt, Amalie Jensen, Horacio Larreguy, David D. Lassen, and John Marshall

Abstract

While social pressure is widely believed to influence voters, evidence that informa-tion passed between social ties affects beliefs, policy preferences, and voting behav-ior is limited. We investigate whether information about unemployment shocks dif-fuses through networks of strong and mostly weak social ties and influences voters in Denmark. We link surveys with population-level administrative data that logs un-employment shocks afflicting respondents’ familial, vocational, and educational net-works. Our results show that the share of second-degree social ties—individuals that voters learn about indirectly—that became unemployed within the last year increases a voter’s perception of national unemployment, self-assessed risk of becoming unem-ployed, support for unemployment insurance, and voting for left-wing political parties. Voters’ beliefs about national aggregates respond to all shocks equally, whereas sub-jective perceptions and preferences respond primarily to unemployment shocks afflict-ing second-degree ties in similar vocations. This suggests that information diffusion through social ties principally affects political preferences via egotropic—rather than sociotropic—motives.

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Reference

James E. Alt, Amalie Jensen, Horacio Larreguy, David D. Lassen, and John Marshall, Diffusing Political Concerns: How Unemployment Information passed between social Ties Influence Danish Voters, TSE Working Paper, n. 22-1292, January 2022.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 22-1292, January 2022