Journal article

Is Putin’ Popularity Real?

Year:

2016

Published in:

Post-Soviet Affairs
Public opinion
Russia
autocracy
approval ratings
item-count technique
preference falsification

Vladimir Putin has managed to achieve strikingly high public approval ratings throughout his time as president and prime minister of Russia. But is his popularity real, or are respondents lying to pollsters? We conducted a series of list experiments in early 2015 to estimate support for Putin while allowing respondents to maintain ambiguity about whether they personally do so. Our estimates suggest support for Putin of approximately 80%, which is within 10 percentage points of that implied by direct questioning. We find little evidence that these estimates are positively biased due to the presence of floor effects. In contrast, our analysis of placebo experiments suggests that there may be a small negative bias due to artificial deflation. We conclude that Putin’s approval ratings largely reflect the attitudes of Russian citizens.

Other publications by

50 publications found

2015
Journal article

Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence From Russia’s Emancipation of the Serfs

Publisher: Comparative Political Studies

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Evgeny Finkel, Tricia D. Olsen

2023
Journal article

Damaged Collateral And Firm‑Level Finance: Evidence From Russia’s War In Ukraine

Publisher: Journal of Comparative Economics

Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Mariia Panga

2021
Working paper

The Oligarch Vanishes: Defensive Ownership, Property Rights, And Political Connections

Publisher: SSRN

Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Anton Shirikov, Scott Gehlbach

2019
Working paper

Obfuscating Ownership

Publisher: The National Science Foundation

Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Anton Shirikov

2014
Journal article

Government Control Of The Media

Publisher: Journal of Public Economics

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Konstantin Sonin