"Our Country Needs a Strong Leader Right Now": Economic Inequality Enhances the Wish for a Strong Leader

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Stefanie Sprong
  • Jolanda Jetten
  • Zhechen Wang
  • Kim Peters
  • Frank Mols
  • Maykel Verkuyten
  • Brock Bastian
  • Amarina Ariyanto
  • Frederique Autin
  • Nadia Ayub
  • Constantina Badea
  • Tomasz Besta
  • Fabrizio Butera
  • Rui Costa-Lopes
  • Lijuan Cui
  • Carole Fantini
  • Gillian Finchilescu
  • Lowell Gaertner
  • Mario Gollwitzer
  • Angel Gomez
  • Roberto Gonzalez
  • Ying-Yi Hong
  • Dorthe Hoj Jensen
  • Inga Jasinskaja-Lahti
  • Minoru Karasawa
  • Thomas Kessler
  • Olivier Klein
  • Marcus Lima
  • Laura Megevand
  • Paola Paladino
  • Tibor Polya
  • Tuuli Anna Renvik
  • Aleksejs Ruza
  • Wan Shahrazad
  • Sushama Shama
  • Heather J. Smith
  • Ana Raquel Torres
  • Anne Marthe van der Bles
  • Michael J. A. Wohl
Societal inequality has been found to harm the mental and physical health of its members and undermine overall social cohesion. Here, we tested the hypothesis that economic inequality is associated with a wish for a strong leader in a study involving 28 countries from five continents (Study 1, N = 6,112), a study involving an Australian community sample (Study 2, N = 515), and two experiments (Study 3a, N = 96; Study 3b, N = 296). We found correlational (Studies 1 and 2) and experimental (Studies 3a and 3b) evidence for our prediction that higher inequality enhances the wish for a strong leader. We also found that this relationship is mediated by perceptions of anomie, except in the case of objective inequality in Study 1. This suggests that societal inequality enhances the perception that society is breaking down (anomie) and that a strong leader is needed to restore order (even when that leader is willing to challenge democratic values).
Original languageEnglish
JournalPsychological Science
Volume30
Issue number11
Pages (from-to)1625-1637
ISSN0956-7976
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2019

    Research areas

  • economic inequality, subjective and objective inequality, anomie, leadership, authoritarianism, populism, preregistered

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