Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Breen, M;Gillanders, R
2015
March
International Interactions
Political Trust, Corruption, and Ratings of the IMF and the World Bank
Published
()
Optional Fields
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES CIVIL-SOCIETY CONDITIONALITY ORGANIZATIONS RECIDIVISM BLUEPRINT PROGRAMS SUPPORT
41
337
364
There are only a handful of studies that examine public support for the IMF and World Bank. Public opinion data on attitudes to the economy feature prominently in these studies. Utilizing data from the Afrobarometer survey, we find that evaluations of the economy, ideology, and a range of sociodemographic factors including age, gender, employment status, health, education, and living conditions are not significantly related to ratings of effectiveness. Rather, we find that political trust and corruption-two very important concepts in the wider literature on individual-level attitudes toward international relations and foreign policy issues-are strongly associated with ratings of effectiveness.
ABINGDON
0305-0629
10.1080/03050629.2014.948154
Grant Details