Political Trust and Covid- 19 Vaccine Hesitancy
Comparing the effects of institutional vs. performancebased trust on vaccine hesitancy in Europe
Abstract
As vaccines against Covid-19 are being distributed globally the goal is to limit the impact of the disease
by achieving herd immunity, and to accomplish this most people need to get vaccinated. Vaccine
hesitancy is a challenge to this goal. This thesis investigates whether and how different forms of political
trust can be linked to individuals’ willingness to get the Covid-19 vaccine in the first half of 2021. Using
data from the Eurobarometer surveys 94.3 from Feb/Mar 2021 (European Commission, 2021a) and 95.3
Jun/Jul 2021 (European Commission, 2021b) together with data from other sources, I perform multilevel
regression analyses on the current 27 European Union member states to investigate the links between
political trust and Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy. The results suggest that political trust is associated with
less vaccine hesitancy, both in the form of institutional trust and trust based on the government’s
performance in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. The results suggest that countries with lower levels
of political trust can expect vaccine hesitancy to be a bigger challenge to achieve high vaccination
coverage.
Degree
Master theses
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022-06-20Author
Törnblom, Emma
Keywords
Keywords: political trust, vaccine hesitancy, Covid-19, EU
Language
eng