en
Scientific article
Open access
English

Foreign Aid and Government Legitimacy

Published inJournal of Experimental Political Science, vol. 2, no. 2, p. 164-171
Publication date2015
Abstract

Branding of foreign aid may undermine government legitimacy in developing countries when citizens see social services being provided by external actors. We run a survey experiment on a sample of Indian respondents. All subjects learn about an HIV/AIDS program; treated subjects learn that it was foreign-funded. Although the results are not statistically significant at conventional levels, the patterns in the data suggest that approval ratings for key government institutions are lower in the treatment conditions while assessments of government performance are higher. These contrasting effects point toward the multiple ways in which government legitimacy might be affected by the presence of foreign aid: political representatives might suffer reputational loss, while overall state legitimacy remains unchanged.

Affiliation Not a UNIGE publication
Citation (ISO format)
DIETRICH, Simone Susanne, WINTERS, Matthew S. Foreign Aid and Government Legitimacy. In: Journal of Experimental Political Science, 2015, vol. 2, n° 2, p. 164–171. doi: 10.1017/XPS.2014.31
Main files (1)
Article (Accepted version)
accessLevelPublic
Identifiers
ISSN of the journal2052-2649
92views
36downloads

Technical informations

Creation08/02/2021 7:07:00 PM
First validation08/02/2021 7:07:00 PM
Update time03/16/2023 1:02:56 AM
Status update03/16/2023 1:02:56 AM
Last indexation01/17/2024 1:54:17 PM
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack