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Trust in government increased during the Covid‐19 pandemic in Australia and New Zealand
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Citations
4
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2021
Year
Critical Public HealthOnline PanelPublic OpinionHealth PoliticsPolicy AnalysisCovid-19Public Health SystemHealth CommunicationPublic Health PracticePublic HealthPublic InvolvementPublic PolicyPublic Health ScientistsHealth PolicyGlobal Health CrisisCovid-19 PandemicSocial ImpactArtsTrustGovernment TransparencyPublic Health PolicyHealth SystemsNew ZealandTrust ManagementPublic TrustSocial PolicyCovid‐19 Pandemic
Abstract Using an online panel, we surveyed a representative sample of 500 each in Australia and New Zealand during July 2020, in the middle of the Covid‐19 pandemic. We find trust in government has increased dramatically, with around 80% of respondents agreeing government was generally trustworthy. Around three quarters agreed management of the pandemic had increased their trust in government. Over 85% of respondents have confidence that public health scientists work in the public interest. Testing four hypotheses, we find that income and education predict trust in government and confidence in public health scientists, as does voting for the political party in government. Trust in government and confidence in public health scientists strongly predict Covid‐19 phone application use, largely through convincing people the App is beneficial. Trust in government then is both an outcome and antecedent of government effectiveness. Building trust is important for governments implementing difficult policy responses during a crisis.
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