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COMPENSATION HYPOTHESIS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   118530


Does social capital increase public support for economic global / Spilker, Gabriele; Schaffer, Lena Maria; Bernauer, Thomas   Journal Article
Bernauer, Thomas Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The dominant explanation of public attitudes vis-à-vis economic globalisation focuses on re-distributional implications, with an emphasis on factor endowments and government-sponsored safety nets (the compensation hypothesis). The empirical implication of these theoretical arguments is that in advanced economies, on which this article focuses, individuals endowed with less human and financial capital will be more likely to experience income losses. Hence they will oppose economic openness unless they are compensated by the government. It is argued here that including social capital in the analysis can fill two gaps in explanations relying on factor endowments and the compensation hypothesis. First, generalised trust - one key aspect of social capital - constitutes a personal endowment alongside human and financial capital. Second, structural social capital - another key aspect of social capital - can be regarded as a nongovernmental social safety net that can compensate for endowment-related disadvantages of individuals. Both aspects of social capital are expected to contribute, for distinct reasons, to more positive views on economic openness. The empirical testing relies on survey data for two countries: Switzerland and the United States. For both countries, the results indicate that generalised trust has a strong, positive effect on public opinion of economic globalisation, whereas structural social capital has no effect.
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2
ID:   172782


How do geopolitical risks affect government investment? an empirical investigation / Bilgin, Mehmet Huseyin; Gozgor, Giray ; Karabulut, Gokhan   Journal Article
Bilgin, Mehmet Huseyin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The paper examines the effects of geopolitical risks, measured by a new index for geopolitical risk, on general government investment (gross fixed capital formation). It uses panel data for 18 countries for the period from 1985 to 2015. Using panel fixed-effects and the corrected least squares dummy variable estimators, results indicate that geopolitical risks seem to exert a positive effect on government investment.
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