Article Type: Research Article Article Citation: Hsiu-wen Yang.
(2021). COMPARING THE POLITICAL TRUST AND CIVIC POLITICAL CULTURE OF DEMOCRACY
OR AUTHORITARIAN IN ASIAN COUNTRIES. International Journal of Research
-GRANTHAALAYAH, 9(2), 320-333. https://doi.org/10.29121/granthaalayah.v9.i2.2021.3491 Received Date: 29 January 2021 Accepted Date: 28 February 2021 Keywords: Political Trust Citizen
Classification Cultural Values Asian Barometer
Survey The political trust of the people is essential for the consolidation of the regime, but it has not been discussed whether the democratic or authoritarian system is more consolidated. This article uses the Asian Democracy Dynamics Survey of 2010 to divide 11 countries into the system of democracy, excessive democracy and autocracy, and autocracy according to the Polity IV index. It will test the people’s political trust in these three different political systems, and try to explain the differences from the "cultural perspective" and "citizen classification." The cultural perspective is divided into authoritarianism, traditionalism, collectivism, and Confucian which belongs to the specific political culture in Asia. This paper created the concept of "accepted and rejected" citizenship. Studies have found that the more authoritarian the country, the higher the trust of the people, and it’s not easy to change the original regime. In addition to the traditional view, those who do hold culturally authoritative, collective, and Confucian views have high political trust and trust the government to take full responsibility. People have a higher degree of trust in their government, which is the hidden reason that may cause the authoritarian or transitional regime to fail to transform into a democratic regime.
1. INTRODUCTIONWhether democracy can be consolidated has always been an important. The stability or change of a country's political system depends on the support of the people of the country. As for whether to support the political system, it is related to the people's "political trust", because trust in the government can also make the system survive. It is necessary to discuss the relationship between political trust and the democratic system. Regarding the high and low levels of political trust, the influence on the consolidation of the political system is divided into two schools. Hetherington believes that when trust is too high, it may not be conducive to the operation of democracy. The people may unconsciously trust the government without supervision, and the government does not need to respond to the people's demands and generate dictatorship [10]. However, the reduction of political trust
may endanger the continuous operation of the political system. People do not
trust the government and therefore desire to overthrow the government.
Democracy cannot be consolidated [2] Comparing people’s political trust from four countries in East Asia, including Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and China, we found that there are differences between the four countries. Taiwanese people have the lowest political trust and Chinese people have the highest political trust. However, it is difficult to directly judge whether Taiwan, which has a low degree of trust, does have a crisis of democratic survival, or whether it is democratically strong [14]. It means that people do not supervise the government, and they strongly trust the government. In this way, authoritarian government can stabilize non-democratic regimes. According to Polity IV’s evaluation of the four East Asian countries, except for China as an autocratic country, the rest are all democracies. The polity score of the Polity IV report in 2012: China is -7, Japan is 10, Taiwan is 10, South Keara is 8 [18]. The past literature did not discuss the relationship between different political regimes and people’s trust. Therefore, this article wants to explore, when non-democratic regimes are included in the study, what is the relationship between regimes and trust? Political science is used to explain political trust in terms of “institutional approach” and “cultural approach” [19]. The institutional approach used political trust as an immediate performance evaluation of the political system, such as the economic performance of the administrative authority [4], [5]. And whether there is political performance such as bribery, corruption, election fairness, government transparency, etc [3], [27], [23]. Moreover, social performance such as housing, health, employment [26]. Another cultural approach is based on authoritative cultural viewpoints, citizen classification, traditional cultural viewpoints, social capital viewpoints, materialism, Confucian culture, or communism. The direction varies according to cultural differences in different countries [21], [8], [27], [15], [17], [13], [14], [7]. And this article will take the cultural approach to analysis, comprehensively compare the differences between democratic and non-democratic regimes as the overall political culture segmentation, and design the classification indicators of individual citizenship, and compare the data of Asian countries. The research questions of this article are as follows: Under the three classifications of political systems of democratic countries, excessively democratic and authoritarian countries, and authoritarian countries, what are the differences in political trust among the people of different countries? And trying to explain the difference between "cultural perspective" and "citizen classification"; cultural perspective is divided into authoritarianism, traditionalism, collectivism, and Confucianism, and citizen classifications are divided into "accepted and objected". In an attempt to explore the gap in individual political trust from the three cultural values and classifications of citizens, we can also further understand whether the different classifications of citizens in these Asian countries belong to dissident citizens with critical thinking, or citizens who obey the authority of the state. 2.
LITERATURE REVIEW
The definition and operationalization of the term political trust do not have the same argument. Therefore, when analyzing “political trust”, this article must first locate the term. Political trust refers to whether the people can believe that "the political system will avoid harming people's rights and interests, and consider the interests of the people as much as possible [20]. Or it is defined as "the consistency between the results of government administration and the expectations of the people as recognized by the people" [11]. The above definitions all take the public as the starting point and regard a kind of "subjective evaluation." It also shows that how to measure the subjective evaluation of the people is very important. Why is there a difference in trust? Political science often uses " cultural approach" and "system approach" to explain political trust. It believes that, compared with the latter, the former emphasizes perceptual elements and long-term personal value changes, that is, social trust or social capital. This school believes that the public’s trust in politicians or institutions is only an extension of social trust; the institution approach or rational choices think political trust is regarded as endogenous and generated by short-term government performance, and will not have serious consequences for the maintenance of the overall system. Government performance judgments are based on economic performance, political corruption, and political process fairness and transparency [25]. The study has used a multi-level model to analyze political trust from an institutional approach. It found that “the individual's performance in the system” interrelated with “political trust”, but this situation would moderate by differences in the "political competition and regime". The link between "evaluation" and "political trust" has been partially confirmed. The effect is mainly in economic and political evaluation, showing that the more intense a country’s political competition, the lower the people’s political trust will occur in a country with a democratic system [28]. However, lack of the cultural approach in previous articles. Therefore, this paper will try to discuss the influence of "cultural approach" on political trust. Political and cultural research focuses on the theoretical verification of the overall and social level, and explores the people's sense of trust in political institutions and systems, and is suitable for transnational comparative research. This article believes that this kind of cultural approach is mainly divided into two categories: people’s values under different cultures, and classifications of citizens. These themes are all influenced by the "long-term" national background, which establishes different cultural customs in different countries. Instead of the so-called "short-term" performance evaluation of the institutional approach. When discussing the "People's Cultural View" in the context of each country alone, according to the 2006 Asian Democratic Dynamics Survey to discuss the political trust of six Asian countries based on traditionalism, authoritarianism, and post-materialism. The positive relationship between traditionalism and political trust only occurs in Taiwan, while authoritarianism has an impact in Hong Kong and South Korea, but not in China, Singapore, Taiwan, and Japan, and post-materialism does not affect political trust [27]. When compared the trust of Hong Kong and Taiwan. Wong, Hsiao and Wan pointed out that Hong Kong people highly trust the government and the judiciary, while the legislature has relatively low trust; Both show low trust in different fields such as institutional factors (government performance evaluation, life satisfaction, democratic rights) and cultural factors (interpersonal trust, post-materialism, traditionalism)[26]. The political trust measurement method is based on the trust of seven political organizations as the overall political trust of the country, and the institutional variables are "evaluation of the current overall economic situation of the country’s economy, evaluation of the current state of the democratic system, and evaluation of the current state of local government corruption." The cultural variables are based on "trust to the majority of people in society, political authoritarian values", and individual background variables are considered separately. The article believes that the above variables can be reflected; and through the Freedom House, the "democratic system" of various countries Classification (Freedom House), found that Japan and South Korea, which belong to the old or emerging democracies, compare with other democratic countries Mongolia, Thailand, the Philippines, Taiwan, or semi-democracy. There are certain differences in the political trust of these countries. Among them, non-democratic countries The Chinese people have a high degree of political trust, which confirms the influence of institutional channels on political trust, while social trust only affects political trust in some countries. In addition to the above-mentioned authoritative and traditional cultural approaches, Chen and Yang cited the research of Inglehart and Baker and believed that when discussing the authoritative system, the Communist Party culture and Confucian culture should be included. "Collectivist values" of values [7]. The three values of authority, tradition and collective are often discussed in the literature to influence individual values. When the overall political culture affects individual citizens, the political culture of citizens must be discussed. While people’s "liberal and democratic values" have a negative effect on the trust and general trust of the central government, while "traditional social values" have a positive effect [15]. Post-materialism is relative to
materialism. After long-term economic development and social stability, people
have shifted from the values of material satisfaction and security needs to
emphasize personal autonomy and multiple values [16]. Traditionalism is a kind of relying on traditional cultural
values, emphasizing the maintenance of the existing class order, and
collectivism is willing to sacrifice individual interests to achieve social
harmony [24]. People with authoritarianism believe that the country must have a
strong leader who will take everyone to overcome difficulties, and that
individuals are willing to surrender and worship authoritarian. Based on the data of eight Asian countries surveyed
by ABS, the impact of institutional and cultural perspectives on political
trust is discussed. The cultural perspective includes both "social
trust" and "people's cultural outlook [17]." Norris looked for possible reasons for the depressed political trust in Western countries since the 1960s and proposed "critical citizens". They are a group of "ideologically supportive of democratic systems, but actually criticize the current state of democratic operation.” This specific distrust means that the people, on the basis of supporting the democratic system, hold stricter standards and critical attitudes towards the policies of the ruling authorities. Therefore, this “critical” civic attitude is not only ineffective. It will jeopardize democracy and become an optimal driving force that takes into account the output of policies in a democratic system. Political distrust is not necessarily a completely negative meaning to the democratic system [21], [22]. At the same time, Dalton linked the modernization theory and argued that, driven by economic development, distrust of the ruling authority is due to the tendency to increase the effect of "self-expression value", which generates a high degree of critical consciousness. The above two arguments are Western democracies. An explanation for the long-term decline in trust [8]. The so-called "citizen classification" in political culture changes between political trust and the trust of political regimes. Huang uses Taiwan as an example. This article uses empirical data after the 2012 presidential election. At that time, Taiwan was filled with distrust of President Ma Ying-jeou. The study established that "critical citizenship" applies to Taiwanese people’s political trust and found that the political trust of "democratic critics" is lower than that of "democratic satisfied people" and "democratic subjects," and "democratic alienators " do not trust the ruling authorities [14]. The critical classifications of citizens discussed above are mainly aimed at the relationship between political support and personal trust in democratic countries. However, non-democratic countries must also have a certain degree of support for their own "political system", which may also affect personal trust. Since "democratic systems" have "critical" citizens, then non-democratic systems must have obedience is it an " accepted” citizen of an authoritative government? This article will also make a cross-border comparison to find out whether the classifications of citizens are prominently present in different national polities. From the above, we can see that the institutional approach and cultural approach have their own supporting arguments, and each has explanatory power that can strengthen mutual trust in politics. Therefore, the impact of cultural approaches on individuals is long-term, unlike the short-term performance evaluation of the system. Therefore, this paper discusses trust again through cultural approaches and incorporates institutional factors and citizen classifications to measure. 3.
DATA
This article adopts the questionnaire survey research method and uses the third wave of "Asian Barometer Survey" data. The implementation period is from 2010 to 2012. The sample countries are Japan, South Korea, China, Taiwan, Mongolia, Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia and Cambodia. This information is aimed at simultaneous cross-border interviews in Asia, and long-term tracking of personal political attitudes, values and behavioral changes can be called authoritative survey research [9]. 4.
RESEARCH STRUCTURE
Political trust is a dependent variable. Citizen classification, authoritarianism, traditionalism, collectivism, Confucian, personal background, etc. are independent variables. The measurement index of citizen classification is the focus of this article. The design of this indicator is presented in the next section; the above variables, the so-called cultural approach to thinking about the impact on political trust, discussing cross-border and cross-political comparisons.
Figure 1: Research Architecture 5.
MEASUREMENT
According to the research questions and variables in this article, the measurement question is proposed, which is divided into five parts: political trust, citizen classification, authority view, traditional view, collective view, system classification, and personal background. This article directly adopts the
political trust in the government of a single topic: " You can generally trust the people who
run our government to do what is right.." And four of citizen
classifications: it is composed of two questions of system support and
satisfaction. System classification: The people of 11 countries will be scored
according to the Polity IV, 1 point for the autocratic system, 2 points for the
democratic and authoritarian system, and 3 points for the democratic system. The measurement question classifications of various cultural viewpoints are more complicated. Different questions have been changed or deleted according to the ABS in different periods, or changed according to the research questions of scholars. Wong, Wan and Hsiao adopted the 2006 version of ABS, and only measured a single question against traditionalism[26], [27]. In order to compare 2002 and 2011, Chen and Yang as well as research on Confucianism and Communist Party thought as the theme, disassembled traditionalism multi-topics into traditional and collective views, but there are still five questions for measuring traditional views. The question group consists of only 1 is selected as a representative [7]. Chang, Wu and Weatherall based on the five core Confucian views for constituting measurement questions which are hierarchical collectivism, paternalistic meritocracy, interpersonal reciprocity and accommodation, communal interest and harmony, and Confucian familism [1]. Therefore, this article sets up measurement
questions according to the authoritarianism, traditionalism, and collectivism
used in the creation of individual documents. For complete questions, please
refer to Appendix A. In order to establish the concept of composition, the
study first takes confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), and divides the question
group into three concepts. The descriptive statistics of each variable are
shown in Table 1. Table 1: Descriptive Statistics
6.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
We first discuss the theoretical framework of citizen classifications, and then analyze the classifications of citizens of various countries with empirical data. Finally, the study would discuss whether the traditional and authoritative civic cultures and the classifications of citizens of various countries cause the level of political trust or not. 7.
Different citizen
classifications
The concept of civic classification is
formed by Huang with "democratic satisfaction" and "democratic
support". Democracy satisfaction is divided into two standards,
"satisfied" and "dissatisfied", which represent the
positive and negative evaluation of the democratic system by the people. The
degree of democratic support is defined as "absolute support" and
"incomplete support", showing that the people have unconditional
support or limited support and opposition to a democratic government, and they
are divided into “democratic satisfaction”, “democratic subjects”, “democratic
critics”, and “democratic alienators,” please refer to Table 2 [12]. Table 2: Citizen Classification
Note: Author adapted from [12]. According to Huang classification " democratic satisfaction" referred to people who support democracy unconditionally emotionally, and also express satisfaction with the operation of democracy in evaluation. They all positively evaluate the democratic system and provide the legitimacy and support for the operation of the system [14]. "Democratic critics" referred to unreserved support for democracy but dissatisfaction with the current state of democratic operations. They are the so-called "critical citizens". They have become the critics and supervisors of democratic operations. This classification of political trust should be lower than those of democratic satisfaction and subjects. The above-mentioned two kinds of people bring positive significance to democracy. "Democratic subjects" lack absolute democratic desires, are satisfied with the status quo of the system, are loyal supporters of the authorities, will not bring harm to democracy, and have a high degree of political trust. "Democratic alienators " have no absolute desire for democracy. The plot of dissatisfaction with the system is due to the failure of the party they support in the election, which greatly reduces their positive evaluation of the democratic system and has low political trust. Different from critics with low trust, they are the crisis of the consolidation of democracy and they do not trust the legitimacy of democratic politics. In order to explore which classification of citizens the people of various countries belong to? The author assumes that a certain proportion of citizens in a democratic government are critical citizens, as stated in the research. Relatively speaking, a majority of citizens in a non-democratic government (authoritarian government) are democratic subjects. The sample selected in Huang article is not a single country and belongs to a democratic regime. Instead, it uses a cross-country and cross-political model to explore the applicability of the theory, so Table 3 is changed. According to the large-scale ABS survey data, the so-called "democratic" survey is also the first focus. When interviewing countries in Asia, the relevant democratic issues in countries with the "non-democratic" system were not specifically distinguished. Most of the previous articles, when cutting into the study of non-democratic countries, mainly discussed "what do they think of the legitimacy of democracy", but rarely directly discuss which classification of citizen they belong to. Therefore, this article attempts to discuss together the differences in political trust caused by the classifications of citizens in the three systems (democracy, excessive, democracy and autocracy, and autocracy). The author renamed "Democracy
Support" and "Democracy Satisfaction" to "System
Support" and "System Satisfaction". The reason for this change
is that people in non-democratic countries are also targeting the
"Democracy" questionnaire. Reply to the question, but this kind of subjective response to the system performance or support of their own country, compared to the objective Polity IV sub-indicators, they do not achieve the indicators of the so-called "democratic" regime, so they cannot be called "democratic support "and "democratic satisfaction." It can only be said to be subjective ratings of one's own political system. In addition, the government support part is
further divided into three classifications of government:
"democracy," " excessive democracy and autocracy," and
"autocracy." There are 12 classifications that interact with
government satisfaction. Classification 1, 5, and 9 citizens tend to
"accept". Although they do not fully support the country’s
regime, they are still satisfied with the current state of affairs. They obey
the current state of the country’s regime model. Classification 4, 8, and 12
citizens are more inclined to "dissent" and absolutely support
China’s political system, but in fact it is not satisfied with the operating
conditions, and continues to criticize it, hoping to improve the operating
conditions. As for the 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11 citizens, they are in the middle, but
those who are satisfied tend to obey and accept. The alienators tend to express
dissent. Table 3: Citizen Classification with Political System
Source: by authors The coding is to classify each country by
degree, recode and name the variable as "citizen classification". The
larger the number, the more accepted citizens are favored, and the smaller the
number, the more objected citizens. The regime classification standard is based
on Polity IV, please refer to Table 3 and Figure 2. Figure 2: Continuous Variable of the Citizen Classification The empirical data (Table 4) shows that in a democratic regime, there are more critics, and the proportion of submissive citizens in an authoritarian regime is relatively large, confirming the research hypothesis of this article. In terms of the proportion of critics who account for the country’s citizens, democracies have the highest proportions compared to other political systems, especially in Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, and Mongolia. Countries in the transitional period between democratic government and authoritarian government have the highest proportion of citizens. Critical citizens or subjects submissive citizens on both sides of the spectrum are not particularly biased. As for non-democratic regimes, they are most satisfied with the democratic system of the "own country". The proportion of subjective citizens is higher than that of other countries. The result of this may be that after a long period of democratization, a change in the classifications of citizens has occurred, and it may not be due to the change in the political system being affected by the classifications of citizens. This argument can be proved by the "transition period from democracy to autocracy." The proportion of critical critics in Cambodia and Thailand is not high. Therefore, there are indeed differences in the classifications of citizens among countries with different political systems. The focus of this article will be discussed below. This classification of citizens effects of "the people believe that the government can do the right thing". From the assumption of political trust and polity, the country with the lowest political trust shound have more critical citizens. However, Taiwan’s data shows that people’s political trust with ranks at the bottom of the 11 countries, but Taiwan citizens belongs more subjectives than the other democratic countries. Taiwan is a special case with a higher proportion of accepted citizens and a lower degree of trust in the government. According to Table 5, although the results
of this article are similar to the empirical data of Ref. [12] [14] in
Taiwan in 2008 and 2012, the results are similar. According to the data in
2008, 22.2% of the obedient, 31.9% of the satisfied, 28.1% of the divorced, and
critics 17.9%; According to data in 2012, 31.0% are subjects, 41.5% are
satisfied, 12.9% are alienated, and 15.4% are critics. He believes that Taiwan
applies for a critical citizenship and shows that Taiwan has a stable critical
attitude, which is beneficial The democratic system operates. According to the
results of this article, although different databases are selected and a single
country is used as the research target, the results are similar. However, in
terms of cross-country comparisons, the Taiwan case does not seem to belong to
“Critical" the comparison of "democratic" countries. However, in
terms of cross-country research, when comparing other" democratic"
countries, the Taiwan case does not seem to be "critical"(see Table
4). Table 4: Percentage of the Citizen Classification
Table 5: Percentage of Taiwan’s Citizen in Different Year of the study
Next, this article also designed the citizen classification indicator as a continuous observation variable. In order to detect again whether there are significant differences in citizen classifications between countries, this article conducts a statistical one-way-ANOVA, using the Schaffer method and the Post Hoc test, it was found that the P-value of the overall model was less than 0, which was a significant correlation. The difference in citizen classifications is indeed between countries (see Table 6-ANOVA test for the results) A comparison of individual countries found that it is also a cluster of democracies. Taiwan’s citizen score is 0.42 less than Mongolia’s, 0.40 less than Japan, 0.36 less than South Korea, 0.38 less than Indonesia, and 0.18 less than Malaysia. It has once again verified its representativeness in a democracy that the people of Taiwan are significantly more "submissive" than the people of other democratic countries. There is no significant difference in citizenship scores among Mongolia, Japan, South Korea, and Indonesia. Only Malaysia scores lower than Japan’s 0.22 and lower than Mongolia’s 0.23. And Indonesia is 0.16 lower than Malaysia. In summary, the scores of citizens of Mongolia, Japan, South Korea, and Indonesia are more consistent. Taiwan is a special case. As for the reason, the information on Taiwan must be independently investigated in further study. There are still differences in the scores of citizens between Thailand and Cambodia, which are in the middle of the polity, and Cambodia people are like accepting citizens. Most Thailand people are satisfaction types. Among the autocratic countries, China and Vietnam are no different. Singapore is more subjects than China's (-0.47), but after Vietnam, it belongs to the alienators classification (0.44), which is in the middle of the autocratic country. Table 6: ANOVA Test
8.
CULTURAL AND CIVIC
CLASSIFICATIONS TRUST IN POLITICS
First of all, the author conducts a chi-square test of political trust and citizenship, and makes a cross-tabulation of the two variables as shown in Table 7. It can be found that only in "political trust disagrees and subjects"(Z=-0.8), "political trust strongly agrees and subjects"(Z=-1.9), " political trust strongly and alienators"(Z=-1.2). The three parts are not significantly related. Although "high political trust and subjects" is no significant, it still closer the standard -1.96 set by the standardized residuals. It can also be said that the two are related. The rest show that political trust and civic classification are related, and the overall model also shows that the two are related. Table 7: Cross-table with Citizen Classification and Poloitical Trust
Therefore, we can see that there is a correlation between the classifications of citizens and trust, and then this two variable is included in the regression of the overall political trust. Comparing the personal background variable: gender, age, education level. Trying to explain the explanatory power of political trust under the cultural approach, the results refer to Table 8. In terms of personal background, the higher the education level of the people, the less they trust the government(β=-0.058***) , but men or women, which does not affect personal political trust.(β=0.014) When Yang and Meng discuss trust from an institutional approach, the older they are, the more they trust the government(Yang and Meng 2015). However, after incorporating the factors of culture and civic classification, this article finds that age does not affect personal political trust. Among the cultural approaches, especially the "political authority view" and "citizen classification" have the greatest impact on personal political trust(β=-0.084). People who tend to be accepted and authoritative tend to trust the government's actions. Relatively speaking, people tend to be objected and democratic value does not trust the government to govern(β=-0.206). The more people with a view of political authority, the more they identify with those in power and obey the government's decision-making. And the more Confucian people emphasize harmony and patriarchy, they also "trust" the government(β=-0.220***). People with a collective view tend to trust the government to govern. Those with personal views are less able to trust the government simply because they have their own opinions(β=-0.062***). The more the classifications of citizens are toward submissives or accepted, the more they "trust" the government. People who trust the government and lean toward the authoritarian system are more likely to trust the government(β=-0.065***). Except that the traditional view has nothing to do with political trust, the above results conform to the research hypothesis of this article(β= -0.011). Table 8: The Simple Linear Regression of Political Trust Model
Note: Dependent variable is political trust and *p< .05. **p. <.01. ***p< .001. 9.
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Discussing the influence of people’s political trust from the cultural approach, coupled with the classification of civic culture, is different from the previous institutional approach and cultural approach to political trust research. Under the political and cultural background of each country, there is a civic political culture that is exclusive to their own country, and the distinction between the classifications of citizens in the political system is generally consistent with the research inference. This article initially attempts to use cross-sectional and single-year data to discuss the relationship between political trust, culture, and civic classifications. It belongs to the macro-level analysis. It is suggested that when studying cultural approaches in the future, takes a long-term trend study, and it is more likely to find the trend of high trust to low trust, or low trust to high trust, and the reasons and key points of the change by the case study. In this way, it is possible to explore whether changes in trust and "inter-system" constraints can be improved from "key points" to avoid conflicting images of democracy and trust. Or, it is possible to break through the limitations of empirical analysis research methods, join the government's political trust, and discuss the dynamics of "mutual trust" between the people and the government. This may also be an important indicator that whether the polities of various countries can survive. Finally, if the researcher can join the discussion again, the various democratic issues of the people in transitional countries or countries with authoritarian regimes, such as: what is the concept of democracy, and whether they agree with "democratic values", whether democratic values are high or low? The underlying factors may affect why they belong to this classification of citizens and how to generate the effect of high and low political trust. APPENDICES
SOURCES OF FUNDINGThis research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. CONFLICT OF INTERESTThe author have declared that no competing interests exist. ACKNOWLEDGMENTThe authors wish to acknowledge grant Asian
Barometer Survey from Hu Fu Center for East Asia Democratic Studys that
supported this research. REFERENCES [6] Chen, Lu-Huei. (2007).
"Political Trust in Central and Local Government and Its Effects on
Magisterial Elections," Chinese Political Science Review 43, 43-70.
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