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Explaining willingness to pay taxes: The role of income, education, ideology
[journal article]
Abstract While the drivers of preferences about tax progressivity and redistribution are well identified, the study of willingness to pay taxes remains underdeveloped. This article uses the 2016 ISSP on the Role of Government and the 2018 OECD Risks that Matter surveys to identify which groups of voters are ... view more
While the drivers of preferences about tax progressivity and redistribution are well identified, the study of willingness to pay taxes remains underdeveloped. This article uses the 2016 ISSP on the Role of Government and the 2018 OECD Risks that Matter surveys to identify which groups of voters are more likely to be willing to pay taxes. It shows that ideology mediates the correlations between education or income and willingness to pay. Among the left, income and education tend to have a positive association with willingness to pay taxes, whereas both variables are negatively associated with willingness to pay among the right. Thus, the core constituencies of left-wing parties composed of socio-cultural professionals and of production and service workers have different tax policy preferences. Socio-cultural professionals, with their higher education and income, are significantly more willing to pay taxes than production and service workers, who share lower education and income.... view less
Keywords
Europe; ISSP; tax payer; taxation; disposition; occupation; income; level of education; political ideology
Classification
Public Finance
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
International Social Survey Programme: Role of Government V - ISSP 2016 (ZA6900)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 267-284
Journal
Journal of European Social Policy, 33 (2023) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/09589287231164341
ISSN
1461-7269
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed