Global economic influence and domestic regime support: evidence from China

Rising powers typically seek to play a larger role in international economic affairs, but we know little about the impact of this overseas expansion on domestic publics. This paper examines the domestic political consequences of rising states’ efforts to increase their foreign economic influence. We...

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Main Authors: Tan, Y, Steinberg, D, McDowell, D
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2024
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author Tan, Y
Steinberg, D
McDowell, D
author_facet Tan, Y
Steinberg, D
McDowell, D
author_sort Tan, Y
collection OXFORD
description Rising powers typically seek to play a larger role in international economic affairs, but we know little about the impact of this overseas expansion on domestic publics. This paper examines the domestic political consequences of rising states’ efforts to increase their foreign economic influence. We argue that public approval for these governments depends on whether they succeed or fail to expand their country’s global economic influence. To test this argument, we fielded three survey experiments in China, each focusing on a different component of China’s foreign economic strategy. In all three experiments, informing individuals that China has failed in increasing its role in the global economy reduced average levels of government satisfaction. Our evidence suggests that this drop in government approval operates through a weakened sense of national pride, rather than other channels based on economic prospects.
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spelling oxford-uuid:a6084d8f-f44a-49dd-a457-d9c086544a3d2024-08-01T10:24:15ZGlobal economic influence and domestic regime support: evidence from ChinaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:a6084d8f-f44a-49dd-a457-d9c086544a3dEnglishSymplectic ElementsTaylor & Francis2024Tan, YSteinberg, DMcDowell, DRising powers typically seek to play a larger role in international economic affairs, but we know little about the impact of this overseas expansion on domestic publics. This paper examines the domestic political consequences of rising states’ efforts to increase their foreign economic influence. We argue that public approval for these governments depends on whether they succeed or fail to expand their country’s global economic influence. To test this argument, we fielded three survey experiments in China, each focusing on a different component of China’s foreign economic strategy. In all three experiments, informing individuals that China has failed in increasing its role in the global economy reduced average levels of government satisfaction. Our evidence suggests that this drop in government approval operates through a weakened sense of national pride, rather than other channels based on economic prospects.
spellingShingle Tan, Y
Steinberg, D
McDowell, D
Global economic influence and domestic regime support: evidence from China
title Global economic influence and domestic regime support: evidence from China
title_full Global economic influence and domestic regime support: evidence from China
title_fullStr Global economic influence and domestic regime support: evidence from China
title_full_unstemmed Global economic influence and domestic regime support: evidence from China
title_short Global economic influence and domestic regime support: evidence from China
title_sort global economic influence and domestic regime support evidence from china
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