: Passing the partisan filter: Political narratives, partisan bias and opinions on public finances
This paper investigates whether political partisanship and political narratives affect voters' opinions about public finances. In a novel survey experiment, we test the causal effect of pro-consolidation and pro-public investment narratives used in German general election campaigns on participants' opinions on public debt and how to deal with budget deficits. We do not find a relevant average treatment effect of these narratives. However, they partly interact with political party preferences, which are a dominant covariate for opinions on public finances. We interpret our findings as a conjunction of narrative economics theory and the partisan bias literature, by which only emotionally charged narratives pass the partisan filter.
Keywords: public debt, survey experiment, partisan bias
Quelle
Jürgens, Ekaterina; Gechert, Sebastian (2025):
Passing the partisan filter: Political narratives, partisan bias and opinions on public finances
IMK Working Paper Nr. 227, Düsseldorf, 34 Seiten