What makes people feel free: Subjective freedom in comparative perspective Progress Report

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What makes people feel free: Subjective freedom in comparative perspective Progress Report Presented by Natalia Firsova, PhD Student in Sociology at HSE at the Summer School of the Laboratory for Comparative Social Research on August 31, 2011 in Pushkin Key research questions What is it that makes people feel free? Which political, civil and economic freedoms predict subjective freedom? Do the same objective freedoms predict subjective freedom in developed economies and newly emerging market economies? Do materialist and post-materialist priorities predict subjective sense of freedom and how this influence is moderated by country s overall prosperity? What makes people feel free: Progress report by Natalia Firsova 1

Why is it important to study subjective freedom? Human development theory: freedom is a component of subjective well-being (Sen 2011; Welzel & Inglehart 2010) Sociology of consumption: Zygmunt Bauman s theory that freedom in the contemporary society has transformed into consumer freedom of choice Theoretical framework Freedom in the sense of individual autonomy is different from, but related to situational freedom (Levine 1981) in the form of political rights, civil liberties and free markets. Freedom is a universal notion, but its importance for individuals could differ from society to society and over time (Welzel forthcoming). In less affluent economies, people s notion of freedom focuses on economic freedom. From the viewpoint of postmaterialism people prioritize economic freedom before political freedom becomes important for them. What makes people feel free: Progress report by Natalia Firsova 2

Data European Values Study and World Values Survey (VS) 1981-2004 Freedom House indices of political rights, civil liberties, and overall status of freedom 1972-2009 Heritage Foundation & WSJ index of economic freedom and its components 1995-2010 Business freedom Trade freedom Fiscal freedom Government spending Monetary freedom Investment freedom Financial freedom Property rights Freedom from corruption Labor freedom World Bank GDP per capita => the data will cover 1981-2004 or 1995-2004 periods Country-level analysis Individual-level analysis Progress of the project Crucial feedback Use hierarchical linear modeling with GDP for cross-level interactions. Exclude from analysis economic freedoms irrelevant to subjective freedom; use factor analysis to construct an index of economic freedoms; normalize & rescale variables. Include into analysis social tolerance, Corruption Perception Index, Good Governance Index and GDP growth on societal level and autonomy in performing daily activities, ideological correlates, income, and financial satisfaction on individual level. What makes people feel free: Progress report by Natalia Firsova 3

Hypothesis With higher GDP people s sense of freedom determination is shifting from materialist priorities to post-materialist priorities. The dependent variable the subjective sense of freedom operationalized by the VS score as an answer to the How much freedom of choice and control question on a 1-10 scale. a173. Some people feel they have a completely free choice and control over their lives, while other people feel that what they do has no real effect on what happens to them. Please use this scale where 1 means none at all and 10 means a great deal to indicate how much freedom of choice and control you feel you have over the way your life turns out. Materialist and post-materialist indices construction Formative indices construction based on materialist and post-materialist priorities questions. e003. If you had to choose, which one of the things on this card would you say is most important? And which would be the next most important? First choice 1 Maintaining order in the nation ; 2 Give people more say ; 3 Fighting rising prices ; 4 Protecting freedom of speech e001. People sometimes talk about what aims of this country should be in the next ten years. On this card are listed some of the goals which different people would give top priority. Would you please say which ones of these you, yourself, consider the most important? First choice 1 A high level of economic growth ; 2 Strong defence forces ; 3 People have more say about how things are done ; 4 Trying to make our cities and countryside more beautiful. Materialist index: Mati=(e001=1)*1+(e001=2)*1+(e003=1)*1+(e003=3)*1+(e002=1)*0.5+(e002=2)*0.5+ (e004=1)*0.5+(e004=3)*0.5 Post-materialist index: Postmati=(e001=3)*1+(e001=4)*1+(e003=2)*1+(e003=4)*1+(e002=3)*0.5+(e002=4)*0.5+ (e004=2)*0.5+(e004=4)*0.5 What makes people feel free: Progress report by Natalia Firsova 4

Subjective Fredom Multi-Level Logistic Regression: Subjective Freedom, 1999-2004 Values Survey Model 1 (min GDP) Level 1 (58,717 Respondents) R 2 3.42 % Level 2 (64 Countries) R 2 78.80 % Model 2 (max GDP) 3.42 % 78.80 % b t b t Intercept.547 20.918** 0.675 19.937** Political rights and civil liberties index***.031 0.983.031 0.983 Log of GDP pc.023 -x.xxx -x.xxx** 3.723**.024 -x.xxx -x.xxx** 3.723** x.xxx Marital status (1 = Married).010 3.801**.010 3.801** Age Age squared -.171.187-5.357** 4.385** -.171.187-5.357** 4.385** Higher education (1 = Higher.027 5.509**.027 5.509** education) Household income.195 7.971**.050 3.892** Log of GDP pc -.027-4.375** -.027-4.375** Post-Materialist index -.024-1.411.031 2.325* Log of GDP pc.010 2.097*.010 2.097* Gender (1 = Female) -.015-2.893** -.015-2.893** Variance Components (Random Effects) Level 2 Variance Component 2 d.f. Variance Component Intercept.005 4823.6** 61.005 4823.6** 61 Age.013 327.54** 63.013 327.54** 63 Age squared -.- -.- -.- -.- Higher education (1 = Higher -.- -.- -.- -.- education) Household income.005 342.93** 62.005 342.93** 62 Post-Material index.001 138.99** 62.001 138.99** 62 Gender (1 = Female) -.- -.- -.- -.- Level 1 0.069 0.069 Note: * p 0.05; ** p 0.01; Restricted Maximum Likelihood; Convergence: Main-Effect Model: 3 iterations; Cross-Level- Interaction Model: 31 iterations; the pseudo R 2 for the multilevel regression models is calculated according to the simplified formula of Snijders&Bosker (1999) ***as measured by Freedom House 2 d.f. 0.75 GDP = 5.445 GDP = 10.804 0.69 0.63 0.56 0.50 0 0.200 0.400 0.600 0.800 Post-Materialist index What makes people feel free: Progress report by Natalia Firsova 5

Questions? Comments? Suggestions? Thank you for your attention! natalia_firsova@yahoo.com nfirsova@hse.ru What makes people feel free: Progress report by Natalia Firsova 6