Current thinking on the origins and size of the welfare state often ignores house- hold relations in which people may depend on others for income or have dependents themselves. The influence of "dependency status" on individuals' political preferences is unknown. We report results from a laboratory experiment designed to estimate the effect of dependency on preferences for policies that insure against labor market risk. Results indicate that 1) willingness to vote in favor of a social insurance policy is highly responsive to unemployment risk, 2) symmetric, mutual dependence is unrelated to support for insurance, but 3) asymmetric dependence (being dependent on someone else) increases support for social insurance. We connect our lab r...
The dissertation addresses the growth of government commitments to the provision of social insurance...
This dissertation inspects the underlying reasons of demand for social protection policies. It inves...
Scholars have long debated whether welfare policymaking in industrialized democracies is responsive ...
Current thinking on the origins and size of the welfare state often ignores house-hold relations in ...
Conflicts of interest over the generosity and structure of redistribution and social insurance (call...
Replication Data for: Everybody Hurts Sometimes: How Personal and Collective Insecurities Shape Poli...
Data and R code to replicate all analysis described in Ahlquist, Hamman and Jones
Explaining social policy preferences has become a key topic in comparative politics. Labor market ri...
Is public support for social welfare programs contingent on an individual’s exposure to risk? Prior ...
Why is there so much variation in the generosity of social benefits across different governments? In...
This archive contains replication files for the analyses presented in "Do Means of Program Delivery ...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
In recent years, a number of studies have attributed increasing income inequality in the United Stat...
With growing affective polarization in the United States, partisanship is increasingly an impediment...
Even though social investment is highly popular, welfare state recalibration remains an uphill battl...
The dissertation addresses the growth of government commitments to the provision of social insurance...
This dissertation inspects the underlying reasons of demand for social protection policies. It inves...
Scholars have long debated whether welfare policymaking in industrialized democracies is responsive ...
Current thinking on the origins and size of the welfare state often ignores house-hold relations in ...
Conflicts of interest over the generosity and structure of redistribution and social insurance (call...
Replication Data for: Everybody Hurts Sometimes: How Personal and Collective Insecurities Shape Poli...
Data and R code to replicate all analysis described in Ahlquist, Hamman and Jones
Explaining social policy preferences has become a key topic in comparative politics. Labor market ri...
Is public support for social welfare programs contingent on an individual’s exposure to risk? Prior ...
Why is there so much variation in the generosity of social benefits across different governments? In...
This archive contains replication files for the analyses presented in "Do Means of Program Delivery ...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
In recent years, a number of studies have attributed increasing income inequality in the United Stat...
With growing affective polarization in the United States, partisanship is increasingly an impediment...
Even though social investment is highly popular, welfare state recalibration remains an uphill battl...
The dissertation addresses the growth of government commitments to the provision of social insurance...
This dissertation inspects the underlying reasons of demand for social protection policies. It inves...
Scholars have long debated whether welfare policymaking in industrialized democracies is responsive ...