In this paper we argue that religion and welfare state spending are substitute mechanisms that insure individuals against adverse life events. As a result, individuals who are religious are predicted to prefer lower levels of social insurance than will individuals who are secular. To the extent policy outcomes reflect individual preferences, then countries with higher levels of religiosity should have lower levels of welfare state spending. In formalizing our argument we also suggest that if benefits from religion are subject to a network externality (I derive greater pleasure from religion when others are also religious), it is possible for countries that are similar in terms of underlying conditions to exhibit multiple equilibria with respect to religion and social insurance. We empirically test our predictions using individual-level data on religiosity, individual-level data on social insurance preferences, and cross-country data on social spending outcomes. The findings are strongly supportive of our hypotheses.
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15 September 2006
Research Article|
September 15 2006
Religion and Preferences for Social Insurance* Available to Purchase
David Stasavage
David Stasavage
New York University
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*We thank Roland Benabou, Tim Besley, Joan Esteban, Rob Franzese, Thomas Piketty, Andrew Clark, David Epstein, Ben Goodrich, Jim Alt, Torben Iversen, Erzo Luttmer, Jeff Frieden, Debraj Ray, Heski Bar-Isaac, Shanker Satyanath, Jason Wittenberg, the editors of the QJPS, and seminar participants at the DELTA (Paris), Sciences-Po (Paris), the University of Chicago, Harvard University, Yale University, the Polarization and Conflict meeting (Konstanz), and the International Studies Association annual meetings for comments on an earlier draft. We also appreciate financial support and hospitality from STICERD, the CASBS, and the Economic and Social Research Council (UK).
Received:
November 14 2005
Accepted:
May 12 2006
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2006 now Publishers.
2006
now Publishers
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2006) 1 (3): 255–286.
Article history
Received:
November 14 2005
Accepted:
May 12 2006
Citation
Scheve K, Stasavage D (2006), "Religion and Preferences for Social Insurance*". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 1 No. 3 pp. 255–286, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00005052
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