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Last Published November 28, 2020 08:13 AM December 05, 2020 12:36 PM
Intervention (Public) The survey experiment uses a conjoint design. Respondents are either presented with the hypothetical outcomes of one strategy (1/3 of the respondents) or two strategies (2/3 of the respondents) that vary on five dimensions. The respondents are told to imagine that the government is considering the strategy/the strategies in the fight against covid-19 and are asked to score the strategy/the strategies in relation to political trust and prefered choice of strategy. The survey experiment uses a conjoint design. Respondents are either presented with the hypothetical outcomes of one strategy (1/3 of the respondents) or two strategies (2/3 of the respondents) that vary on five dimensions. The respondents are told to imagine that the government is considering the strategy/the strategies in the fight against covid-19 and are asked to score the strategy/the strategies in relation to political trust and prefered choice of strategy. The survey experiment uses a conjoint design. Respondents are either presented with the hypothetical outcomes of one strategy (1/3 of the respondents) or two strategies (2/3 of the respodents). The respondents with two strategies are thus able to compare, while the respondent with only one strategy will have no provided reference point. The respondents are told to imagine that the government is considering the strategy/the strategies in the fight against covid-19. The strategies vary on five dimensions (which are presented randomly): 1) The fatality rate [0.1-0.3%,0.5-1%, 3-5%] 2) The economic costs [less than the 2008 financial crises, about the same as the 2008 financial crises, more than the 2008 financial crises] 3) Use of GPS data from cellphones [yes, no] 4) Who will be able to get tested for the virus [all who have a need, only the very ill, only the very ill and those that are able to pay for test] 5) Who will suffer from most from the economic costs (all equally, low-wage earners and vulnerable groups]
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