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Self-interest versus sociotropic considerations: an information-based perspective to understanding individuals’ trade preferences

Lena Maria Schaffer and Gabriele Spilker

Review of International Political Economy, 2019, vol. 26, issue 6, 1266-1292

Abstract: Economic self-interest has been central to explaining individual trade preferences. Depending on the theoretical trade model different variables influence individuals’ attitude towards globalization and existing research has come to different conclusions as to whether individuals’ preferences are dependent on skill level, income or the sector of employment. Other studies depart from economic self-interest by arguing that it is not self-interest that motivates individuals to form their preference, but country-level economic factors (sociotropic considerations) instead. We argue that one needs to approach trade preference formation from an information-based perspective and we test experimentally how people react if they are aware that they personally or nationally will gain or lose from trade and which of the two aspects are more important. By using survey experiments embedded in a representative national survey in the U.S. we are able to differentiate whether a person was triggered by ego- or sociotropic benefits/costs of free trade.

Date: 2019
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DOI: 10.1080/09692290.2019.1642232

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