Post-Materialism in an Environment of Insecurity
Ronald Inglehart
American Political Science Review, 1981, vol. 75, issue 4, 880-900
Abstract:
This article tests the hypothesis that postwar affluence led to an intergenerational shift from Materialist to Post-Materialist values among Western publics, and analyzes the consequences of the economic uncertainty prevailing since 1973. The young emphasize Post-Materialist values more than the old. Time-series data indicate that this reflects generational change far more than aging effects, but that the recession of the mid-1970s also produced significant period effects. As Post-Materialists aged, they moved out of the student ghetto and became a predominant influence among young technocrats, contributing to the rise of a “New Class.” They furnish the ideologues and core support for the environmental, zero-growth and antinuclear movements; and their opposition to those who give top priority to reindustrialization and rearmament constitutes a distinctive and persisting dimension of political cleavage.
Date: 1981
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:75:y:1981:i:04:p:880-900_18
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