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      Risky Business? Welfare State Reforms and Government Support in Britain and Denmark

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          Abstract

          Are welfare state reforms electorally dangerous for governments? Political scientists have only recently begun to study this seemingly simple question, and existing work still suffers from two shortcomings. First, it has never tested the reform–vote link with data on actual legislative decisions for enough points in time to allow robust statistical tests. Secondly, it has failed to take into account the many expansionary reforms that have occurred in recent decades. Expansions often happen in the same years as cutbacks. By focusing only on cutbacks, estimates of the effects of reforms on government popularity become biased. This article addresses both shortcomings. The results show that voters punish governments for cutbacks, but also reward them for expansions, making so-called compensation, a viable blame-avoidance strategy. The study also finds that the size of punishments and rewards is roughly the same, suggesting that voters’ well-documented negativity bias does not directly translate into electoral behavior.

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          Most cited references24

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          The New Politics of the Welfare State

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            The Politics of Blame Avoidance

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              Economic Determinants of Electoral Outcomes

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                British Journal of Political Science
                Brit. J. Polit. Sci.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0007-1234
                1469-2112
                October 2 2017
                : 1-20
                Article
                10.1017/S0007123417000382
                baffccec-da78-4395-bc24-5aab8a111021
                © 2017
                History

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