Working Paper

‘Tiger-Hunting’ and Life Satisfaction: A Matter of Trust

Youxing Zhang, Peter Howley, Clemens Hetschko
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 10058

Governments will often look to publicly signal their efforts to tackle issues of concern as a way of garnering political support. Combining data on the public disclosure of anti-corruption efforts and individual well-being in China, we show that such signals may increase the salience of the issue in question and hence diminish the life satisfaction of citizens with low political trust. For citizens with high trust, such signals appear to enhance life satisfaction. This means that signalling efforts may have unintended negative consequences on population well-being and thus political support, particularly when faced with low political trust.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: corruption, life satisfaction, political trust, signalling theory, confirmation bias
JEL Classification: D730, I310, P480, O170