Krupenkin Masha
Boston College, 140 Beacon Street, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 USA.
Polit Behav. 2021;43(1):451-472. doi: 10.1007/s11109-020-09613-6. Epub 2020 May 5.
This article studies the role of partisanship in American's willingness to follow government recommendations. I combine survey and behavioral data to examine partisans' vaccination rates during the Bush and Obama administrations. I find that presidential co-partisans are more likely to believe that vaccines are safe and more likely to vaccinate themselves and their children than presidential out-partisans. Depending on the vaccine, presidential co-partisans are 4-10 percentage points more likely to vaccinate than presidential out-partisans. Using causal mediation analysis, I find that this effect is the result of partisans' differing levels of trust in government. This finding sheds light on the far-reaching role of partisanship in Americans' interactions with the federal government.
本文研究党派偏见在美国人遵循政府建议意愿方面所起的作用。我结合调查数据和行为数据,以考察在布什和奥巴马政府执政期间党派人士的疫苗接种率。我发现,与总统党外人士相比,总统党内人士更有可能相信疫苗是安全的,也更有可能为自己和孩子接种疫苗。根据不同疫苗来看,总统党内人士接种疫苗的可能性比总统党外人士高4至10个百分点。通过因果中介分析,我发现这种影响是党派人士对政府信任程度不同的结果。这一发现揭示了党派偏见在美国人与联邦政府互动中所起的深远作用。