4.3 Article

COVID-19 and American Attitudes toward US-China Disputes

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHINESE POLITICAL SCIENCE
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 139-168

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11366-020-09718-z

Keywords

COVID-19; American public opinion; Foreign policy; The South China Sea dispute; The U; S; -China trade war

Funding

  1. Deliberative Media Lab, University of Virginia

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This study found a positive association between the level at which American public blames the Chinese government for the pandemic and their support for aggressive policy options towards China. Those who believe the Chinese government is solely responsible for the outbreak in the U.S. are more likely to support hawkish policy options, such as confrontational military actions, economic sanctions, or higher tariff rates.
The COVID-19 outbreak has fueled tension between the U.S. and China. Existing literature in international relations rarely focuses on virus outbreaks as factors affecting international relations between superpower countries, nor does research examine an outbreak's potential influence on the public's opinion about their country's foreign policy. To bridge this research gap, this study explores the extent to which the American public may be prone to favor policies that punish China via existing U.S.-China disputes, such as the South China Sea dispute and the U.S.-China trade war. I conducted an online survey using Amazon's Mechanical Turk and ran multinomial and ordered logit models to estimate the association between an individual's preferred policies and the country or government an individual blame for the impact of the pandemic. After controlling several essential confounding factors, such as one's levels of nationalism and hawkishness, I found strong evidence that there is a positive association between people's attribution of blame to the Chinese government and the likelihood of supporting aggressive policy options in the two disputes with China. That is to say, U.S. citizens who believe that the Chinese government is solely culpable for the outbreak in the U.S., compared to those who think otherwise, are more likely to support hawkish policy options, such as confrontational military actions, economic sanctions, or higher tariff rates. The research provides a glimpse into where Americans may stand in these disputes with China and the potential development of U.S.-China relations in the post-pandemic era.

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