On the Preferences for Strong Leadership*
Published online on November 01, 2018
Abstract
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Objectives
This article aims to answer the question of who favors strong political leadership, with a few checks on its power.
Methods
First, we specify a formal model to generate testable hypotheses on the relationship between income and attitudes toward strong political leadership support. Then, we test these claims using a rich survey of individual attitudes across countries from 1999 to 2004.
Results
We present evidence indicating that the support for such strong leadership is inversely related to individual income, even after controlling for additional characteristics, such as education. Individual attitudes toward strong leadership are also inversely related to country‐level indicators such as income inequality, level of GDP per capita, and institutional characteristics.
Conclusion
We rationalize these findings by suggesting that a strong leader, sometimes with little legislative oversight, nevertheless benefits from public support in expectation that his policies would provide protection from the expropriation by powerful elites.
- 'Social Science Quarterly, Volume 99, Issue 4, Page 1267-1282, December 2018. '