DiSEGIM, University of Napoli Parthenope, Naples, Italy.
Center for Economic Studies - CES-Ifo, Munich, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2023 Oct 5;13(1):16784. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-42133-x.
Following restrictions to control the spread of COVID-19, and subsequent vaccination campaigns, sentiments against such policies were quick to arise. While individual-level determinants that led to such attitudes have drawn much attention, there are also reasons to believe that the macro context in which these movements arose may contribute to their evolution. In this study, exploiting data on business activities which supported a major Italian anti-restriction and anti-vaccine movement, IoApro, using quantitative analysis that employs both a fractional response probit and logit model and a beta regression model, we investigate the relationship between socio-economic characteristics, institutional quality, and the flourishing of this movement. Our results suggest a U-shaped relationship between income and the proliferation of the movement, meaning that support for these movements increases the greater the degree of economic decline. Our results further indicate that the share of the population between 40 and 60 years old is positively related to support for such movements, as is institutional corruption.
为控制 COVID-19 的传播而采取的限制措施以及随后的疫苗接种运动之后,人们很快就对这些政策产生了抵触情绪。虽然导致这种态度的个人层面的决定因素引起了广泛关注,但也有理由相信,这些运动出现的宏观背景可能会对它们的发展产生影响。在这项研究中,我们利用支持意大利主要的反限制和反疫苗运动“IoApro”的商业活动数据,采用分数响应概率和对数模型以及贝塔回归模型进行定量分析,研究了社会经济特征、制度质量与这一运动蓬勃发展之间的关系。我们的研究结果表明,收入与运动的扩散之间呈 U 型关系,这意味着这些运动得到的支持越多,经济衰退的程度就越大。我们的研究结果还表明,40 至 60 岁之间的人口比例与对这些运动的支持呈正相关,制度腐败也是如此。