ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

Unequal Responses to Inequality: The Structure and Origins of Redistributive Preferences across Advanced Democracies

Comparative Politics
Democracy
Social Welfare
Quantitative
Public Opinion
Survey Research
Empirical
Xavier Romero-Vidal
Carlos III-Juan March Institute of Social Sciences – IC3JM
Xavier Romero-Vidal
Carlos III-Juan March Institute of Social Sciences – IC3JM
Steven M. Van Hauwaert
Université catholique de Lille – ESPOL

Abstract

An important aspect of politics is “who gets what”. That is, redistributive politics and economic (in)equality play an important role in advanced democracies. While scholars pay ample attention to the relationship between inequality and redistribution, we know relatively little about how this relates to citizens. This study begins to fill this empirical gap by engaging in a twofold analysis of the structure and origins of redistributive preferences across advanced democracies. First, we examine if, when and how the redistributive preferences differ across income groups. A time-series cross-sectional analysis of data on aggregate redistributive preferences from seven advanced democracies (1980s-2017) rejects the common notion of parallel movement between issue publics and establishes a more heterogeneous change pattern between these groups. We subsequently scrutinise the origins of the redistributive preferences of different income groups by relating them to inequality. Here, we focus on how middle- and higher-income strata respond to inequality, and what the ramifications are in terms of democratic representation. What role does inequality play in explaining redistributive preferences and the preference gap between income groups? Altogether, these two components allow for critical empirical insights into the democratic puzzle of one of the most salient societal domains, namely redistribution.