image: Trends in trust in parliament, the legal system, and the police within Western Europe and North America.
Credit: University of Southampton
New research from the University of Southampton has found that trust in representative institutions, such as parliaments, governments and political parties, has been declining in democratic countries around the world.
The study, published in The British Journal of Political Science, presents the largest and most comprehensive analysis of trends in political trust worldwide to date. It brings together results from 3,377 surveys covering 143 countries between 1958 and 2019, representing over five million survey respondents.
Whereas trust in representative institutions is generally in decline, trust in non-representative institutions such as the police, civil service and the legal system has remained stable or rising, pointing to a particular crisis of confidence in countries’ elected representatives.
Researchers say the findings are a ‘warning sign’ that could pave the way for non-democratic political leaders to use the state in more autocratic ways.
"The decline of public trust in political authorities is central to the challenges facing democratic governments in many countries today,” says Dr Viktor Valgarðsson, lead author of the study from the University of Southampton.
“Low political trust tends to be associated with support for populist parties and leaders who rail against the political establishment. It also makes it harder for governments to respond to crises such as climate change and the Covid-19 pandemic.
"In the United States, trust in federal government has been in sharp decline over the past couple of decades and it is no coincidence that we are now seeing a dramatic assault on democratic institutions there, led by a candidate who was elected after promising to do exactly that.
"While there is still evidence that citizens largely support the idea of democracy, large numbers of them have lost faith in the institutions that are needed for democratic governance, leading some of them to vote for candidates who appear intent on dismantling democracy as we know it."
The study found:
- Overall, trust in parliament has declined by around nine percentage points from 1990 to 2019 across democracies globally, while trust in the police rose by around 13 points in the same period.
- Trust in parliament is declining in 36 democracies, including Argentina, Brazil, France, Italy, Spain, South Korea, Australia and the United States, and has only risen in six.
- In the UK, trust in parliament and government has been gradually declining in recent decades, although a small (seemingly temporary) recovery was apparent around the Brexit referendum. Trust in the legal system and the police appears to have declined until the 2008 financial crisis but has been rising gradually since then.
- Trust in parliament and government took a global nosedive following the 2008 financial crash, but there are some regional differences; in Latin America, political trust was rising until about 2014 but has been declining rapidly since then. Meanwhile, there was no apparent decline in Asia and the Pacific.
- Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Ecuador and New Zealand buck the global trend, with trust rising in representative institutions there.
Professor Will Jennings, a coauthor of the report from the University of Southampton, says: “Declining trust in democratic institutions isn’t inevitable. If it is something about the way democratic politics is practised that citizens distrust, perhaps those politics need to change.
“Given citizens’ continually high support for democratic ideals, those changes may well be in the direction of more democratic governance, rather than less.”
The research was supported by the UK Economic and Social Research Council and the Leverhulme Trust.
A Crisis of Political Trust? Global Trends in Institutional Trust from 1958 to 2019 is published in the British Journal of Political Science and is available online.
Ends
Contact
Steve Williams, Media Manager, University of Southampton, press@soton.ac.uk or 023 8059 3212.
Notes for editors
- A Crisis of Political Trust? Global Trends in Institutional Trust from 1958 to 2019 is published in the British Journal of Political Science and is available online here: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123424000498
- For interviews, please contact Steve Williams, Media Manager, University of Southampton press@soton.ac.uk or 023 8059 3212.
- Images available here: https://safesend.soton.ac.uk/pickup?claimID=H6CZuHJjS33vkK3K&claimPasscode=XBNigQ8Y3aARHstn
- Fig 1: Trends in trust in parliament, the legal system, and the police within Western Europe and North America. Credit University of Southampton
- Fig 7: Trends in trust in representative institutions from regional models (only including democracies). Credit University of Southampton
- Fig 8: Trends in trust in implementing institutions from regional models (only including democracies). Credit University of Southampton
- Fig: 9: Trends in trust in six institutions from global models (only including democracies). Credit University of Southampton
- Country specific graphs available on request.
Additional information
The University of Southampton drives original thinking, turns knowledge into action and impact, and creates solutions to the world’s challenges. We are among the top 100 institutions globally (QS World University Rankings 2025). Our academics are leaders in their fields, forging links with high-profile international businesses and organisations, and inspiring a 22,000-strong community of exceptional students, from over 135 countries worldwide. Through our high-quality education, the University helps students on a journey of discovery to realise their potential and join our global network of over 200,000 alumni. www.southampton.ac.uk
www.southampton.ac.uk/news/contact-press-team.page
Follow us on X: https://twitter.com/UoSMedia
Article Title
A Crisis of Political Trust? Global Trends in Institutional Trust from 1958 to 2019
Article Publication Date
12-Feb-2025
COI Statement
The authors declare no competing interest