Trading-off health safety, civil liberties, and unemployment based on communication strategies: the social dilemma in fighting pandemics
Besarta Veseli, Rouven Seifert, Michel Clement, Edlira Shehu

TL;DR
This paper explores how communication strategies influence public acceptance of pandemic restrictions, balancing health, civil liberties, and unemployment.
Contribution
The study reveals how communication focusing on health or economic factors and risk attribution affects acceptance of pandemic measures.
Findings
Most people prefer maintaining pandemic restrictions, showing ethical trade-offs between personal and societal harm.
Including economic factors in communication significantly reduces acceptance of restrictive measures.
When economic risks are attributed to one's own group, acceptance of restrictions increases.
Abstract
Crisis management often requires decisions that prioritize the collective good over individual interests. Effective crisis communication strategies can influence individuals’ behavior towards the collective good, preventing negative societal externalities. However, little is known about how these strategies affect individual acceptance of decisions that involve trade-offs between individual and collective interests. We study individual choice behavior regarding maintaining or lifting government-imposed restrictions on private and public life in a referendum setting in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Maintaining or lifting the restrictive measures represents a social dilemma that involves trade-offs between civil liberties, health safety, and economic consequences. In three online experiments, we test the impact of communication strategies that focus on health and/or economic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmployment and Welfare Studies · COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
