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Political trust and climate policy choice: evidence from a conjoint experiment

Daniel Devine, Gerry Stoker, Will Jennings

2024Journal of Public Policy12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Why do citizens support or reject climate change mitigation policies? This is not an easy choice: citizens need to support the government in making these decisions, accept potentially radical behavior change, and have altruism across borders and for future generations. A substantial literature argues that political trust facilitates citizen support for these complex policy decisions by mitigating the cost and uncertainty that policies impose on individuals and buttressing support for government intervention. We test whether this is the case with a pre-registered conjoint experiment fielded in Germany in which we vary fundamental aspects of policy design that are related to the cost, uncertainty, and implementation of climate change policies. Contrary to strong theoretical expectations and previous work, we find no difference between those with low and high trust on their support for different policy attributes, assuaging the concern that low and declining trust inhibits climate policymaking.

Topics & Concepts

PoliticsGovernment (linguistics)Public economicsConjoint analysisAltruism (biology)Climate changeWork (physics)Intervention (counseling)EconomicsPolitical scienceMicroeconomicsSocial psychologyPsychologyEngineeringLawPreferencePhilosophyMechanical engineeringPsychiatryLinguisticsBiologyEcologyEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityClimate Change Communication and PerceptionElectoral Systems and Political Participation
Political trust and climate policy choice: evidence from a conjoint experiment | Litcius