Abstract :
This article describes public attitudes toward government spending in Australia,
China, India, Japan, Russia, and the United States, the sixmajor economies of the Asia-
Pacific region. An analysis of the 2008 AsiaBarometer Survey data shows that ordinary
citizens of the sample countries favored increased, rather than reduced, government
spending on a wide range of policy programs. It is also found that support for state
activism was stronger in former state socialist countries than in market capitalist
ones. Although economic interests, symbolic predispositions, and social positions
influenced spending preferences to varying degrees, left–right ideology was particularly
conspicuous in most countries surveyed. It is evident that the mass publics of the
major economies of the Asia-Pacific region did not strongly endorse state contraction
or retrenchment, even in the wake of economic globalization and the neoliberal reform
movement.