Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

New Deal, New Patriots: How 1930s Government Spending Boosted Patriotism During World War II

2022; Oxford University Press; Volume: 138; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/qje/qjac028

ISSN

1531-4650

Autores

Bruno Caprettini, Hans‐Joachim Voth,

Tópico(s)

Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies

Resumo

Abstract We demonstrate an important complementarity between patriotism and public-good provision. After 1933, the New Deal led to an unprecedented expansion of the U.S. federal government’s role. Those who benefited from social spending were markedly more patriotic during World War II: they bought more war bonds, volunteered more, and, as soldiers, won more medals. This pattern was new—World War I volunteering did not show the same geography of patriotism. We match military service records with the 1940 census to show that this pattern holds at the individual level. Using geographical variation, we exploit two instruments to suggest that the effect is causal: droughts and congressional committee representation predict more New Deal agricultural support, as well as bond buying, volunteering, and medals.

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