Abstract
The United States has not developed a comprehensive welfare state, unlike most other Western countries. This has been subject to a number of different interpretations. One of the prominent theories is that Americans carry a special creed of individuality and liberty that can be traced back to the establishment of the American nation-state. This cultural “American exceptionalism” is argued to be a hindrance to welfare state development in the past as well as in the future. The article challenges this cultural essentialist interpretation by comparing the attitudes toward government responsibility for welfare policies among first-generation American migrants living in Germany, the Netherlands, and Denmark to Americans living in the United States. The article finds, using propensity score matching, that the Americans exposed to the institutional context of Northern European welfares states are more supportive of governmental responsibility for the sick, pensioners, and the unemployed and redistribution than are the American control group members.