TL;DR: In Australia at least, people say they support smaller government except in all the areas you ask them about specifically.
http://blogs.crikey.com.au/pollytics/2012/06/11/what-australians-believe/ (I'm posting some tables here, but merely referencing others. They're all at this URL. Also, there's a lot more here but it's mostly Australia-specific stuff about how Labor vs Liberal partisan issues play out in these polls)
In the abstract, Australians believe the government is "too large" and "tries to do too much":
Yet when you drill down into ANY specific policy area, that belief falls apart:
So that's services. What about government involvement in the economy?
Well. Major party voters want more industry support to keep car manufacturing here, a majority support more industry support in general. Most of us think privatising telecommunications and Qantas was a bad thing. A majority of us would support creating a government-owned bank.
Basically, while there's recognition of the good done by some key liberalising economic reforms (floating currency, free trade) we don't like privatisation of anything and we don't think the government is doing enough in basically every area of service provision. As seen in the table above, there's extremely high support for universal health coverage (medicare) and the compulsory superannuation (forced retirement savings) system, two of the biggest impositions on private income that there are.
Likewise in labour markets essentially everyone supports compulsory penalty rates and thinks labour market flexibility benefits bosses and corporations, not workers.
Same with regulation of finance and corporations, same with foreign investment in stuff.
Even in non-economic areas there is general support for basically every area of the nanny state you care to name:
All in all, the contrast between "government is too big" and what people actually believe in this country is quite spectacular, whether it's on service provision, government involvement in the economy, labour market regulation or "nanny state" type stuff. I'm actually struggling to think of an area not covered by these results where theoretically government "size" reductions could exist.
It's also striking just how removed from actual public beliefs the "mainstream" discourse and debate has become:
(Amusingly the Greens are probably closer to what polling tells us are mainstream views than either major party)
What do you make of this? Is this paradox an Australian quirk? What are opinion polls saying in your own country.
http://blogs.crikey.com.au/pollytics/2012/06/11/what-australians-believe/ (I'm posting some tables here, but merely referencing others. They're all at this URL. Also, there's a lot more here but it's mostly Australia-specific stuff about how Labor vs Liberal partisan issues play out in these polls)
In the abstract, Australians believe the government is "too large" and "tries to do too much":

Yet when you drill down into ANY specific policy area, that belief falls apart:

So that's services. What about government involvement in the economy?
Well. Major party voters want more industry support to keep car manufacturing here, a majority support more industry support in general. Most of us think privatising telecommunications and Qantas was a bad thing. A majority of us would support creating a government-owned bank.
Basically, while there's recognition of the good done by some key liberalising economic reforms (floating currency, free trade) we don't like privatisation of anything and we don't think the government is doing enough in basically every area of service provision. As seen in the table above, there's extremely high support for universal health coverage (medicare) and the compulsory superannuation (forced retirement savings) system, two of the biggest impositions on private income that there are.
Likewise in labour markets essentially everyone supports compulsory penalty rates and thinks labour market flexibility benefits bosses and corporations, not workers.
Same with regulation of finance and corporations, same with foreign investment in stuff.
Even in non-economic areas there is general support for basically every area of the nanny state you care to name:

All in all, the contrast between "government is too big" and what people actually believe in this country is quite spectacular, whether it's on service provision, government involvement in the economy, labour market regulation or "nanny state" type stuff. I'm actually struggling to think of an area not covered by these results where theoretically government "size" reductions could exist.
It's also striking just how removed from actual public beliefs the "mainstream" discourse and debate has become:
What comes out from this broad snapshot is that what Australians believe about the role of government in our society and economy isnt necessarily what our institutions believe or practice, and probably hasnt been for a while. Our beliefs as a country are certainly far removed from many participants in the national debate that pretend to speak on behalf of our population and on behalf of our interests.
Whatever the faults, foibles or otherwise of these national beliefs and this isnt an exercise in either support of, or opposition to them our national debates on the role of government in our society and economy are becoming increasingly isolated from what the majority of the country actually believes.
(Amusingly the Greens are probably closer to what polling tells us are mainstream views than either major party)
What do you make of this? Is this paradox an Australian quirk? What are opinion polls saying in your own country.