Drought and Trust
Abstract
Droughts can affect people’s political trust positively, through rallying effects, or
negatively, through blame attribution. We examine how drought conditions affect
political trust in the context of Africa. We link high-precision exogenous climate data
to survey respondents, 2002–2018, and report moderate negative effects of drought
conditions on people’s trust in their president. These negative effects increase with the
severity of drought conditions. The political economy of favoritism, where some regions
are preferentially treated by rulers, should result in heterogeneous effects across
territories. We find that trust increases in capital regions and in leader birth regions
during dry conditions. In contrast, when droughts take place in such regions, trust
levels fall in other regions. This is in line with the idea that capital regions and leader
birth regions could be preferentially treated in the aftermath of droughts.
Understanding these processes further is important given their salience because of
global warming.
Link to web site
https://www.gu.se/sites/default/files/2023-04/2023_6_Ahlerup_Sundstrom_Jagers_Sjostedt.pdf
Date
2023-04Author
Ahlerup, Pelle
Sundström, Aksel
Jagers, Sverker C.
Sjöstedt, Martin
Publication type
article, other scientific
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2023:6
Language
eng