As market reform has spread throughout the globe, both scholars and policy makers have become increasingly interested in measuring public opinion towards economic changes. However, recent research from American politics suggests that special care must be paid to how surveys treat non-respondents to these types of questions. We extend this line of inquiry to a well-known case of large-scale economic reform, Russia in the mid-1990s. Our major finding is that Russians who fail to answer survey questions tend to be consistently less “liberal” than their counterparts who are able to answer such questions. This finding has implications both for our understanding of Russian public opinion in the 1990s, as well as for measuring attitudes towards economic reform more generally.
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March 2006
Research Article|
January 24 2006
“Don’t knows” and public opinion towards economic reform: Evidence from Russia
Adam J. Berinsky,
Adam J. Berinsky
*
a Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Political Science, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, E53-459, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
* Corresponding author. E-mail address:[email protected] (A.J. Berinsky).
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Joshua A. Tucker
Joshua A. Tucker
b Princeton University, Department of Politics and Woodrow Wilson School, 227 Bendheim Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA
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* Corresponding author. E-mail address:[email protected] (A.J. Berinsky).
Communist and Post-Communist Studies (2006) 39 (1): 73–99.
Citation
Adam J. Berinsky, Joshua A. Tucker; “Don’t knows” and public opinion towards economic reform: Evidence from Russia. Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1 March 2006; 39 (1): 73–99. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.postcomstud.2005.12.002
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