The Protestant Fiscal Ethic: Religious Confession and Euro Skepticism in Germany

SOEPpapers 754, 24 S., XI

Adrian Chadi, Matthias Krapf

2015

get_appDownload (PDF  252 KB)

Abstract

During the European sovereign debt crisis, most countries that ran into fiscal trouble had Catholic majorities, whereas countries with Protestant majorities were able to avoid fiscal problems. Survey data show that, within Germany, views on theeuro differ between Protestants and Non-Protestants, too. Among Protestants, concerns about the euro have, compared to Non-Protestants, increased during the crisis, and significantly reduce their subjective wellbeing only. We use the timing of survey interviews and news events in 2011 to account for the endogeneity of euro concerns. Emphasis on moral hazard concerns in Protestant theology may, thus, still shape economic preferences.



JEL-Classification: E00;I31;L82;Z12
Keywords: Protestantism, euro crisis, subjective wellbeing, media coverage
Frei zugängliche Version: (econstor)
http://hdl.handle.net/10419/110363

keyboard_arrow_up