“…There is a rich literature on the complex association between political trust and welfare state support that can only be briefly reviewed here (see Kumlin et al (2017) for a recent and more comprehensive overview). Generally speaking, researchers have identified a positive, self-reinforcing feedback relationship between political trust and more specific measures of welfare state performance on the one hand and individual willingness to support the welfare state and its further expansion on the other (Edlund, 2006;Gabriel & Trüdinger, 2011;Habibov et al, 2018aHabibov et al, , 2018bHabibov et al, 2019b;Hetherington, 2005;Kumlin, 2013;Lynch & Gollust, 2010;Rothstein et al, 2012;Rudolph & Evans, 2005;Svallfors, 2002;Wendt et al, 2010). Scholarship has studied both how generalized political trust might influence further support for the welfare state (Rothstein et al, 2012) as well as how performance perceptions of particular social policies in turn might increase general political trust (Cammett et al, 2016).…”