Report

Monitoring International Integration

MII1: Europe's Trust Deficit: Causes and Remedies

This first report in the Monitoring International Integration series identifies economic and social characteristics associated with Europe’s growing trust deficit in some EU countries, as well as factors associated with support for non-mainstream political parties and movements labelled as 'anti-EU'.

Publication file

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Citation

Dustmann, C, B Eichengreen, and S Otten (2017), “Populism and the problem of trust“, in A Sapir, G Tabellini and G Zoega (eds), MII1: Europe's Trust Deficit: Causes and Remedies, CEPR Press, London. https://cepr.org/chapters/populism-and-problem-trust

Citation

Dustmann, C, B Eichengreen, and S Otten (2017), “Review of empirical literature“, in A Sapir, G Tabellini and G Zoega (eds), MII1: Europe's Trust Deficit: Causes and Remedies, CEPR Press, London. https://cepr.org/chapters/review-empirical-literature

Citation

Dustmann, C, B Eichengreen, and S Otten (2017), “Attitudes of populist voters“, in A Sapir, G Tabellini and G Zoega (eds), MII1: Europe's Trust Deficit: Causes and Remedies, CEPR Press, London. https://cepr.org/chapters/attitudes-populist-voters

Citation

Dustmann, C, B Eichengreen, and S Otten (2017), “Populism, trust in political institutions and European integration“, in A Sapir, G Tabellini and G Zoega (eds), MII1: Europe's Trust Deficit: Causes and Remedies, CEPR Press, London. https://cepr.org/chapters/populism-trust-political-institutions-and-european-integration

Citation

Dustmann, C, B Eichengreen, and S Otten (2017), “Policy implications“, in A Sapir, G Tabellini and G Zoega (eds), MII1: Europe's Trust Deficit: Causes and Remedies, CEPR Press, London. https://cepr.org/chapters/policy-implications-1