The corrosive effect of corruption on trust in politicians : evidence from a natural experiment

Author

Ares, Macarena

Hernández, Enrique

Publication date

2017

Abstract

Empirical studies do not provide a univocal answer about the effects of corruption on political attitudes and behaviour. Focusing on the relationship between corruption and political trust, in this article we explore whether real-world corruption scandals have a negative causal effect on trust in politicians; whether the impact of scandals decays over time; and whether corruption scandals have a weaker impact among the supporters of the party involved in the scandal. We address these questions through a natural experiment generated by the coincidence of the uncovering of a corruption scandal in Spain (the Bárcenas scandal) and the fieldwork of the European Social Survey. Given that the day at which survey interviews were conducted is as-if random, the uncovering of the scandal represents a unique opportunity to assess the causal effect of corruption on individuals' trust in politicians. The results indicate that: (i) the corruption scandal had a substantial negative effect on trust in politicians; (ii) the effect of the scandal was stronger in the days following its disclosure; (iii) the effect of the scandal was independent from individuals' partisan preferences.

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Corruption; Natural experiment; Trust in politicians; Political support; Scandals

Publisher

 

Related items

Research and Politics ; Vol. 4 Núm. 2 (2017), p. 1-8

Rights

open access

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