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Local David Versus Global Goliath: Populist Parties and the Decline of Progressive Politics in Italy
- Source :
- Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper Series. :1-85
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Institute for New Economic Thinking, 2020.
-
Abstract
- This paper analyzes the role of local spending, particularly on social welfare, and local inequality as factors in the Italian political crisis following the adoption in 2011 of more radical national austerity measures. We employ two different methods. First, we develop an original database of municipal budgets. There we show that even the lowest level of social welfare spending, that offered by Italian municipalities, though also hit by austerity, was still able to moderate this national shock. We test three operationalizations of local spending: aggregate current expenditures, aggregate current expenditures on social services, and current expenditures disaggregated by function. We show that municipal current expenditures, particularly on social spending, significantly affected the post-2011 share of votes for the progressive coalition. The results also show that social spending, especially on education, significantly moderated the combined effect of national austerity and the economic crisis on voting for populist radical right parties, while no significant results appeared for populist parties in general. Local inequality appears to significantly enhance vote shares of populist radical right parties and populist parties in general. We caution that, although significant, the effect is not strong: that local policy and economic conditions can moderate national shocks but cannot reverse them. The second analysis relies on survey data to ascertain the individual-level mechanisms behind the role of local welfare. The paper argues that local economic inputs influence voters’ position on non-economic issues. Our results, however, do not identify any significant individual-level channel of transmission, be it cultural or economic.
- Subjects :
- Inequality
media_common.quotation_subject
05 social sciences
Social Welfare
0506 political science
Populism
Shock (economics)
Austerity
Political economy
Voting
0502 economics and business
050602 political science & public administration
Economics
Survey data collection
050207 economics
Welfare
media_common
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper Series
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........f9ead629289791be77cc5f8e30c03817