Fear, trust, and compliance with COVID-19 measures: a study of the mediating effect of trust in government on the relationship between fear and compliance

Lenka Hrbková, Aleš Kudrnáč
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Abstract

As the COVID-19 pandemic became an unprecedented global threat, it was accompanied by an increase in trust in governments as well as fear among the public. Previous research suggests that both institutional trust and fear contribute to the willingness of citizens to comply with anti-pandemic measures. Moreover, fear during the contagion also increases trust in government. This article presents a test of the mediation of the effects of fear on compliance through trust. In addition, it differentiates between three different facets of COVID-19-related fear: fear of the disease, fear of economic consequences, and fear of political consequences. The results suggest that while fear of the disease increases compliance, fear of political consequences decreases compliance. Moreover, the effects of fear are mediated through trust in government. The negative impact of fear of political consequences on compliance increased between April and December 2020.
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恐惧、信任和 COVID-19 测量的遵从性:研究对政府的信任对恐惧与遵从之间关系的中介效应
随着 COVID-19 大流行病成为前所未有的全球性威胁,人们对政府的信任和公众的恐惧也随之增加。以往的研究表明,制度信任和恐惧感都有助于提高公民遵守防疫措施的意愿。此外,疫情蔓延期间的恐惧也会增加对政府的信任。本文检验了恐惧通过信任对遵守措施的影响的中介作用。此外,文章还区分了 COVID-19 相关恐惧的三个不同方面:对疾病的恐惧、对经济后果的恐惧和对政治后果的恐惧。研究结果表明,对疾病的恐惧会增加遵从性,而对政治后果的恐惧则会降低遵从性。此外,恐惧的影响是通过对政府的信任来调节的。在 2020 年 4 月至 12 月期间,对政治后果的恐惧对遵从性的负面影响有所增加。
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