Working Paper

Fear, Trust and Demand for Regulation: Evidence from the Covid-19 Pandemic in Russia

Ekaterina Borisova, Timothy Frye, Koen Schoors, Vladimir Zabolotskiy
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 10156

Understanding demand for state regulation is a foundational issue for social science. To account for this demand, existing theories rooted in market failure and government failure have focused on various forms of trust, but have paid little attention to fear. We test how fear and trust shape demand for government regulation by drawing on especially precise measures of Covid-related regulations gathered in a survey of more than 23,000 respondents in 61 Russian regions. We show that fear of contracting the virus is directly related to greater demand for regulation. In addition, the impact of trust is conditional on the level of fear. Higher interpersonal trust is related to lower demand for Covid-19 regulation, while higher institutional trust is associated with greater demand, but, provided fear is sufficiently great, demand for regulation will be high regardless of levels of interpersonal and institutional trust. These results inform debates about theories of regulation, identify critical scope conditions for existing research on trust and demand for regulation, and open a fruitful line of research by examining how fear of social bads shapes support for state intervention.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Keywords: fear, trust, demand for regulation, Covid-19, Russia
JEL Classification: D640, H110, I120, Z130