Values and Beliefs, Welfare Evaluations, and Attitudes Towards a Universal Basic Income in Europe
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Gwangeun Choi
Version: View help for Version V2
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Attitudes Towards a UBI in Europe.zip | application/zip | 11.1 MB | 02/29/2020 07:48:PM |
Project Citation:
Choi, Gwangeun. Values and Beliefs, Welfare Evaluations, and Attitudes Towards a Universal Basic Income in Europe. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2020-03-01. https://doi.org/10.3886/E111201V2
Project Description
Summary:
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This
study investigates the determinants of public support for a universal basic
income (UBI), using the European Social Survey Round 8 (2016), which is a
cross-national survey that asked respondents for the first time whether or not
they support a UBI scheme. Among the determinants, this article focuses on the three
sets of factors: basic human values (universalism, benevolence, power, and
achievement), beliefs about economic differences (economic individualism and
economic fairness), and evaluations of current social benefits and services.
The findings show that young, leftist, and economically vulnerable people who
are unemployed or low-income earners are more supportive of UBI, as expected.
Regarding the predictors of the values and beliefs, those who are in favor of
enhancing equality in a broad sense are more likely to support UBI; those who
support economic individualism and worry about a lack of work ethic and
economic burden imposed by welfare policies are less likely to support UBI, as
hypothesized. However, the results are unexpected that those who are more
inclined to self-enhancement values (power and achievement) and targeted
welfare policies are more supportive of UBI, which reveals that UBI is not just
an egalitarian policy.
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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Basic Income;
Welfare Attitudes;
Welfare States;
Human Values;
Welfare Evaluations;
Egalitarianism
Geographic Coverage:
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23 European countries, including Israel and Russia
Time Period(s):
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2016 – 2016 (ESS Round 8 in 2016)
Data Type(s):
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survey data
Methodology
Data Source:
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European Social Survey Round 8 (2016)
Related Publications
This study is un-published. See below for other available versions.
Published Versions
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