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Rising inequality and public support for redistribution
[journal article]
Abstract Seminal models in political economy imply that rising economic inequality should lead to growing public demand for redistribution. Yet, existing empirical evidence on this link is both limited and inconclusive – and scholars regularly doubt it exists at all. In this research note, we turn to data fr... view more
Seminal models in political economy imply that rising economic inequality should lead to growing public demand for redistribution. Yet, existing empirical evidence on this link is both limited and inconclusive – and scholars regularly doubt it exists at all. In this research note, we turn to data from the International Social Survey Programme's (ISSP) Social Inequality surveys, now spanning the period from 1987 to 2019, to reassess the effect of rising inequality on support for redistribution. Covering a longer time series than previous studies, we obtain robust evidence that when income inequality rises in a country, public support for income redistribution tends to go up. Examining the reaction across income groups to adjudicate between different models of how rising inequality matters in a second step, we find that rising inequality increases support for redistribution within all income groups, with a marginally stronger effect among the well-off. Our results imply that insufficient policy responses to rising inequality may be less about absent demand and more about a failure to turn demand into policy, and that scholars should devote more attention to the latter.... view less
Keywords
ISSP; inequality; public opinion; redistribution; political economy; attitude; difference in income; redistribution of income
Classification
General Sociology, Basic Research, General Concepts and History of Sociology, Sociological Theories
Political Economy
Free Keywords
International Social Survey Programme: Social Inequality I - ISSP 1987 (ZA1680 v1.0.0, doi:10.4232/1.1680); International Social Survey Programme: Social Inequality II - ISSP 1992 (ZA2310 v1.0.0, doi:10.4232/1.2310); International Social Survey Programme: Social Inequality III - ISSP 1999 (ZA3430 v1.0.0, doi:10.4232/1.3430); International Social Survey Programme: Social Inequality IV - ISSP 2009 (ZA5400 v4.0.0, doi:10.4232/1.12777); International Social Survey Programme: Social Inequality V - ISSP 2019 (ZA7600 v3.0.0, doi:10.4232/1.14009)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2025
Page/Pages
p. 442-455
Journal
European Journal of Political Research, 64 (2025) 1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12696
ISSN
1475-6765
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed