Does schooling increase political belief accuracy?
Articles
Overview
published in
- POLITICAL STUDIES Journal
publication date
- November 2024
start page
- 1632
end page
- 1652
issue
- 4
volume
- 72
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
full text
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0032-3217
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1467-9248
abstract
- Citizens must hold accurate beliefs about politically relevant facts to preserve democratic representation, accountability and legislation. We theorize that, abstracting from one's background, schooling per se does not trigger the epistemological sophistication that is necessary to get a grasp of the political world. In this article, we study whether schooling improves the accuracy of factual beliefs about the share of foreigners and unemployed, later in life. We derive an appealing metric of belief accuracy, matching survey respondents' beliefs with the corresponding real-world datum at the time of the interview in their country, retrieving high levels of inaccuracy in both issues. More educated individuals display higher belief accuracy, most likely due to selection, rather than causality: compelling otherwise-dropouts to stay in school by extending compulsory education does not entail a significant effect on belief accuracy, in both issues. Taken together, cross-sectional and causal estimates suggest that education is necessary, but not sufficient, to contrast inaccurate beliefs.
Classification
subjects
- Education
keywords
- education; misperception; democracy; public opinion