ID | 112460 |
Title Proper | How can economic interests influence support for free trade? |
Language | ENG |
Author | Fordham, Benjamin O ; Kleinberg, Katja B |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Recent research on the sources of individual attitudes toward trade policy comes to very different conclusions about the role of economic self-interest. The skeptical view suggests that long-standing symbolic predispositions and sociotropic perceptions shape trade policy opinions more than one's own material well-being. We believe this conclusion is premature for two reasons. First, the practice of using one attitude to predict another raises questions about direction of causation that cannot be answered with the data at hand. This problem is most obvious when questions about the expected impact of trade are used to predict opinions about trade policy. Second, the understanding of self-interest employed in most studies of trade policy attitudes is unrealistically narrow. In reality, the close relationship between individual economic interests and the interests of the groups in which individuals are embedded creates indirect pathways through which one's position in the economy can shape individual trade policy preferences. We use the data employed by Mansfield and Mutz to support our argument that a more complete account of trade attitude formation is needed and that in such an account economic interests may yet play an important role. |
`In' analytical Note | International Organization Vol. 66, No.2; Spring 2012: p. 311-328 |
Journal Source | International Organization Vol. 66, No.2; Spring 2012: p. 311-328 |
Key Words | Economic Interests ; Free Trade ; Trade Policy Opinions ; Individual Economic Interests |