492 results
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2. The role of public social expenditure for mitigating local income inequality: An investigation across spatial scales in Austria.
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Neuhuber, Tatjana and Schneider, Antonia E.
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INCOME inequality , *PUBLIC spending , *INHERITANCE & transfer tax , *RESEARCH personnel , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
This paper investigates the role of municipal and provincial public social spending for local income inequality after taxes and transfers in Austria. We utilize a spatial multi‐level model, which allows us to analyze the contribution of three spatial scales (municipal, district, and provincial level) to municipal income inequality. Our analysis shows that the effect of public social spending on local Gini indices does not only differ across provinces but also across municipalities which indicates that the potential cushioning effect of social expenditure is highly localized. Further splitting total public social expenditure into three distinct categories (education, health, social protection) reveals that spending on social protection has the highest effect on local inequality across all provinces, while health spending does not exert a discernible influence in any province. The method and results presented in this paper are of international interest for policymakers and researchers who aim to investigate whether the same patterns hold true in other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Perceived economic inequality inhibits pro‐environmental engagement.
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Huo, Rongmian, Yang, Shasha, Dong, Cai, and Chen, Sijing
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WEALTH inequality , *INCOME inequality , *NATIONAL character , *GROUP identity , *INTERNET surveys - Abstract
We currently inhabit an era marked by increasing economic inequality. This paper delves into the repercussions of perceived economic inequality on individual‐level pro‐environmental engagement and puts forth an explanatory mechanism. Across three empirical studies encompassing an archival investigation employing a nationally representative data set (Study 1), an online survey (Study 2) and an in‐lab experiment (Study 3), we consistently unearth the inhibiting effect of perceived economic inequality on individuals' pro‐environmental involvement, whether assessed through pro‐environmental intentions or behaviours. Furthermore, our findings reveal that individuals' identification with their country elucidates these results. Specifically, perceived economic inequality diminishes individuals' national identification, encompassing their concern for the country's well‐being and their sense of shared destiny with fellow citizens, thereby curbing their pro‐environmental engagement. Additionally, we conduct a single‐paper meta‐analysis (Study 4), revealing small to moderate effect sizes for our key findings. Theoretical and practical implications stemming from these novel findings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Pension system design: roles and interdependencies of tax-financed and funded pensions.
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Jarner, Søren F., Jallbjørn, Snorre, and Andersen, Torben M.
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INCOME inequality , *MARKET failure , *SYSTEMS design , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to give an overview of the roles, objectives, and trade-offs in a two-pillar pension system consisting of tax-financed, public pensions and defined contribution, individual pensions. A pension system has many moving parts and our aim is to provide the reader with an understanding of how the parts interact and work together, a theme rarely addressed in the literature. In the first part of this paper, we give a qualitative overview of market failures, behavioural aspects, and distributional issues that form the background for a multi-pillar pension system design with mandatory components. In the second part of this paper, we present three thematic, quantitative analyses that illustrate fundamental relationship concerning wealth, inequality, insurance, and demographic changes. This paper also contains a detailed description of the agent-based model used for the analyses. The model is calibrated to Danish data, but the insights drawn from the model are of general validity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Spatiotemporal evolution and driving factors of agricultural land transfer in China.
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Chen, Haijiang, Ho, Hong-Wai, Ji, Chunli, Zheng, Haoqing, and Zhang, Songlin
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INCOME inequality , *PROBABILITY density function , *FARM mechanization , *FINANCIAL inclusion , *DISPOSABLE income , *QUANTILE regression - Abstract
This paper systematically analyzes the spatiotemporal evolution trends and macroeconomic driving factors of farmland transfer at the provincial level in China since 2005, aiming to offer a new perspective for understanding the dynamic mechanisms of China's farmland transfer. Through the integrated use of kernel density estimation, the Markov model, and panel quantile regression methods, this study finds the following: (1) Farmland transfer rates across Chinese provinces show an overall upward trend, but regional differences exhibit a "U-shaped" evolution characterized by initially narrowing and then widening; (2) although provinces have relatively stable farmland transfer levels, there is potential for dynamic transitions; (3) factors such as per capita arable land, farmers' disposable income, the social security level, the urban‒rural income gap, the urbanization rate, government intervention, and the marketization level significantly promote farmland transfer, while inclusive finance inhibits transfer, and agricultural mechanization level and population aging have heterogeneous impacts. Therefore, to achieve convergence of low farmland transfer regions to medium levels while promoting medium-level regions to higher levels, it is recommended that the government increase support for agricultural mechanization, increase farmers' income and social security levels, and optimize marketization processes and government intervention strategies. The main contributions of this paper are (1) systematically revealing the spatiotemporal evolution patterns of China's farmland transfer and (2) employing panel quantile regression methods to explore the heterogeneous impacts of driving factors, providing more precise and detailed empirical support for the government's formulation of farmland transfer policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Equity assessment of global mitigation pathways in the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report.
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Kanitkar, Tejal, Mythri, Akhil, and Jayaraman, T.
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CLIMATE justice , *MEDIAN (Mathematics) , *FUTURES , *INCOME inequality , *ENERGY consumption ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper analyses 556 model scenarios assessed by IPCC's Working Group-III for the 6th Assessment Report, which have an underlying 10-region classification and correspond to restricting warming levels to 1.5 ℃ and 2 ℃. We show that across all scenarios, the current global inequalities in incomes, energy use, and emissions, are projected to continue even in 2050. Scenarios also project higher per capita fossil fuel use and lower carbon dioxide removal in developed countries in 2050 compared to developing countries. Our results demonstrate the scale and scope of unequal outcomes in these scenarios, that have been anticipated by theoretical critiques of the underlying models. The paper explores the potential reasons for the unequal outcomes of the scenarios focusing on the two key issues of scenario design and modelling framework. Our analysis also suggests that instead of summary assessments focusing on singular median values or percentile ranges, as undertaken in the IPCC report, more could be learned from focusing on differences between models or considering outliers that could present new and innovative solutions to the determination of equitable and efficient future mitigation pathways. Our analysis underlines the need for new frameworks for emissions modelling and scenario building, for constructing possible futures that can also foreground equity and climate justice. Key Policy Insights: Scenarios assessed by IPCC project continuing global inequality in 2050. Inequality is pervasive across all variables – energy, fuel use, GDP, and emissions. Higher CO2 reduction and CDR are projected for some developing regions. IPCC must comprehensively review scenario assessment and reporting processes to ensure the transparent representation of all scenarios in the literature. There is a need for new scenario and modelling frameworks that consider and include climate equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Is the era of declining global income inequality over?
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Kanbur, Ravi, Ortiz-Juarez, Eduardo, and Sumner, Andy
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INCOME inequality , *WEALTH inequality , *ECONOMIC expansion , *DEFINITIONS - Abstract
This paper examines the trajectory of global income inequality since 1981. Commonly used (relative) definitions indicate a decline in global inequality since the late 1980s. Looking ahead, it has been intuited that the influence of China's economic development—and that of other rapidly growing, populous nations—on the between-country component will, at some juncture, diminish and start to add to global inequality should economic growth persist. Our paper formalizes the turning point of global inequality through a simple model. For illustrative purposes, we empirically present the implications for the timing of the turning point in the context of a weaker post-pandemic growth recovery versus a stronger, albeit improbable, post-pandemic growth recovery. We conclude by arguing that the era of declining global income inequality is likely over, considering the forces influencing both the between-country and within-country components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. The Fatal Lure of Politics: The Life and Thought of Vere Gordon Childe: By Terry Irving. Melbourne: Monash University Publishing, 2020. Pp. 424. A$39.95 paper.
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Gojak, Denis
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PRACTICAL politics , *INCOME inequality , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *EUROPEAN history , *CIGARETTE smoke , *HISTORICAL archaeology - Abstract
Irving has done an excellent job in describing Childe's political journey and mapping it onto his prehistoric archaeological scholarship in a way that enhances both. While many of Childe's specific proposals about European history have either been amended or have evolved to the point where he no longer remains a touchstone, European archaeology still operates in the framework largely created by Childe's grand syntheses. After this Childe found work as private secretary to John Storey, NSW Labor member for Balmain, first in opposition and then in government, Storey becoming Premier in 1920. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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9. Girl Archaeologist: Sisterhood in a Sexist Profession: Alice Beck Kehoe, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 2022. 195 pp., 22 figs., table of contents. $24.95 paper.
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Cooper, Catherine G.
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ARCHAEOLOGISTS , *SISTERHOODS , *PROFESSIONS , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *HISTORICAL archaeology , *INCOME inequality , *SEXISM - Abstract
Thoughtful members of the broader anthropological and archaeological community will recognize many of the themes of Kehoe's work and appreciate the resonance with current challenges and discussions in the academic community. Kehoe mentions a few times throughout her memoir her recent project working on a book titled I Archaeologies of Listening i (Peter R. Schmidt and Alice B. Kehoe, editors). I Girl Archaeologist: Sisterhood in a Sexist Profession i is Alice Beck Kehoe's memoir - it recounts her explorations in archaeology (broadly defined) and the changes she experienced and witnessed in the profession. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2022
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10. Refined tastes, coarse tastes: Solving the stratification-of-goods enigma.
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Khalil, Elias L
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RATIONAL choice theory , *SOCIAL classes , *UTILITY functions , *INCOME inequality , *SOCIAL services - Abstract
The "Stratification-of-Goods" expresses social ranking where the lower status group consumes almost exclusively coarse goods such as Rambo films while the upper status group consumes almost exclusively refined goods such as Shakespearean plays. The Stratification-of-Goods is an enigma for the social welfare function (SWF)—which also applies at the level of the individual utility function. It is an enigma because it makes SWF and individual utility function ill-defined: there is no single metric that allows us to compare the utility functions across groups, as well as the tastes across a single decision maker (DM), insofar as they are segregated by the refinement of taste. This paper proposes a model that promises to solve the Stratification-of-Goods Enigma. The model, consistent with rational choice theory, starts with DMs who have identical tastes but differ with respect to income level. If income inequality is non-trivial, DMs invest differently in what this paper calls "sophistication capital"—the education needed to appreciate refined goods. The difference in investment in sophistication capital sets in motion dynamics that generates hard-to-reverse status stratification. In this fashion, this paper offers a solid endogenous account that solves the Stratification-of-Goods Enigma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Is Utah the Most Sexist State? No.
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Iglesias, David R. and Block, Walter E.
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GENDER inequality , *GENDER role , *GENDER wage gap , *INCOME inequality , *CULTURAL landscapes , *SEXISM - Abstract
This paper critically examines the claim that Utah is "the most sexist state" in the United States, as suggested by a WalletHub report ranking it lowest in "Women's Equality." Utilizing an economic analysis from the Austrian School perspective, this study scrutinizes the data, metrics, and conclusions of reports by the Utah Women & Leadership Project (UWLP). The analysis focuses on distinguishing statistical disparities from sexism, proposing that observed gender inequalities in Utah are largely influenced by cultural and economic factors, particularly the state's high marriage rate and traditional gender roles. Contrary to the notion that sexism predominantly drives gender disparities, the paper argues that personal choices and subjective value theory play significant roles in shaping these outcomes. The study highlights the importance of considering cultural context, individual preferences, and the marital asymmetry hypothesis when interpreting gender-related data, challenging the assertion that Utah's gender disparities are primarily due to sexist attitudes. The findings suggest that Utah's gender gaps in areas such as income and workforce participation are more accurately attributed to the state's unique cultural and economic landscape rather than pervasive sexism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. The short- and long-run effect of human capital on income inequality: Empirical evidence in the ASEAN region.
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Vo, Duc Hong, Vo, Anh The, and Ho, Chi Minh
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SUSTAINABLE development , *INCOME gap , *INCOME inequality , *HUMAN capital , *ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Human capital is a nation's primary source of inner strength to achieve sustainable economic growth and development. Meanwhile, income inequality is a critical issue preventing sustainable economic growth and social transformation, especially in developing countries. This paper investigates the effect of human capital on income inequality in both the short and long term using the mean group, pooled mean group, and threshold regressions for the ASEAN-7 (including Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam) from 1992 to 2018. The paper develops a theoretical linkage between human capital and income inequality by combining the learning theory and the Kuznets hypothesis. This linkage is then tested using data from the ASEAN countries. Findings from the paper indicate that human capital reduces income inequality in the short run in the ASEAN countries. However, the effect is reverted in the long run, suggesting that human capital may increase the income gap in these countries. Particularly, the inverted U-shaped relationship between human capital and income inequality is established for the ASEAN countries whose GDP per capita is lower than USD 8.2 thousand per year. In contrast, the U-shaped relationship is found for the countries with income per capital of more than USD 8.2 thousand. All these findings suggest that social policies targeting reducing income inequality should be prioritized and stay at the centre of any economic policies to achieve sustainable economic growth and development in the ASEAN countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Dealing with Rising Inequality: Is the Fed Up for the Task, or Will Everyone Get Fed Up?
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Pressman, Steven
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INTEREST rates , *INCOME inequality , *MONETARY policy - Abstract
Recently, considerable research effort has been devoted to studying the impact of monetary policy on inequality. This paper summarizes the literature on the causes of rising inequality and looks at the empirical work on interest rates and inequality. It argues that growing empirical evidence concerning the impact of monetary policy on inequality is mixed and that the conflicting results concerning monetary policy and inequality involve, to a large extent, how one measures inequality. Overall, it seems that loose monetary policy increases incomes of those at the bottom of the distribution but reduces their income relative to those at the top of the distribution. The paper also examines some post-Keynesian monetary policy rules to deal with inequality and finds them wanting in many respects. Going further, the paper argues that monetary policy is too a blunt instrument for reducing inequality and that reducing inequality needs to be the job fiscal policy, which is better suited to dealing with this problem and which has the political authority to deal with distributional problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Understanding PKK, Kurdish Hezbollah and ISIS Recruitment in Southeastern Turkey.
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Övet, Kerem, Hewitt, James, and Abbas, Tahir
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TERRORIST recruiting , *WEALTH inequality , *INCOME inequality , *POLITICAL movements , *RADICALISM - Abstract
This paper provides an explanation for how the PKK, Kurdish Hezbollah, and ISIS, representing distinct ethno-nationalist, Islamist and ideologically motivated political movements, radicalize and recruit supporters in the regions of Eastern and Southeastern Turkey. In doing so, this paper contributes to ongoing theoretical debates about radicalization and recruitment. This study reveals how various regionally specific structural factors encourage radicalization and recruitment into violent politico-ideological movements. In particular, state oppression of ethnic minorities, economic inequalities, geography, and local demographics. While existing literature on radicalization focuses on push factors (structural) combined with pull factors (ideology), this research demonstrates that structural factors in Eastern and Southeastern Turkey are both push and pull factors in processes of radicalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. Energy Poverty and Democratic Values: A European Perspective.
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Kwilinski, Aleksy, Lyulyov, Oleksii, and Pimonenko, Tetyana
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DEMOCRACY , *POVERTY , *INCOME inequality , *ECONOMIC equilibrium , *ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
This paper explores the complex relationship between energy poverty and the maintenance of democratic values within the European Union (EU), suggesting that energy poverty not only impacts economic stability and health outcomes but also poses significant challenges to democratic engagement and equity. To measure energy poverty, a composite index is developed using the entropy method, which surpasses traditional measures focused solely on access to energy or its developmental implications. To assess the level of democratic governance in EU countries, the voice and accountability index (VEA), which is part of the World Governance Indicators compiled by the World Bank, is utilized. By analyzing EU data from 2006 to 2022, the findings suggest that a 1% improvement in VEA quality, represented by a coefficient of 0.122, is correlated with a notable improvement in the energy poverty index. This suggests that the EU should focus on enhancing transparency and public participation in energy decision-making, along with ensuring accountability in policy implementation. The research also differentiates between full and flawed democracies, noting that tailored approaches are needed. In full democracies, leveraging economic prosperity and trade is crucial due to their significant positive impacts on the energy poverty index. In contrast, in flawed democracies, enhancing governance and accountability is more impactful, as evidenced by a higher coefficient of 0.193. Strengthening legal and regulatory frameworks, improving regulatory quality, and ensuring public engagement in governance could substantially mitigate energy poverty in these contexts. In addition, this paper demonstrates that this relationship is influenced by factors such as income inequality, energy intensity, and trade openness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Hardening the EU core-periphery lines, 2009–2019: Dependency, neoliberalism, welfare reformation and poverty in Greece.
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Missos, Vlassis, Domenikos, Charalampos, and Pontis, Nikos
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REFORMATION , *INCOME inequality , *POVERTY , *NEOLIBERALISM , *ECONOMIC policy , *WELFARE state , *DIVISION of labor - Abstract
• The paper engages with the devastating consequences that the belated neoliberal reformation of the Greek welfare state – initiated after the 2009 economic crisis – had on income inequality and poverty. • It is argued that these reformations rely on the manner with which Greece has developed its relations within the global – mostly European – capitalist division of labor as a peripheral economy. Greece's economic affairs are approached as intimately conditioned by a multifaceted institutional structure of dependencies that outstrips its ability to exercise economic policy for its own interest. • Essentially built upon premises of a core-periphery dependency paradigm, the paper takes the view that since the onset of the 2008 global crisis, the EU anti-labor agenda is extended to country-members – such as Greece – which were long regarded as being poorly integrated or "lagged behind". The large-scale reformation of the Greek welfare state is exemplified and a novel interpretation of estimating the country's poverty level with attention paid to the ineffectiveness of the implemented reforms, is offered. • New estimation methods show the failure of neoliberal welfare policy in assisting even the most vulnerable members of the population, a process known as "targeting". This last part is further supported by genuine evidence drawn from several waves of microdata surveys (see Section 6) illustrating the uneven relation between Greece and the EU. • Three different measures of poverty and efficiency are presented based on original analyses of the official datasets, showing the extent of the overall income loss and the widening gap between Greece and the EU. The paper holds a critical view on EU austerity policies, with particular emphasis given to Greece. It is maintained that the main causes for the implementation of neoliberal reforms should be examined in the manner with which the Greek economy has developed in relation with the European capitalist division of labor as a peripheral economy. Greece is approached as intimately conditioned by a multifaceted institutional structure of dependencies that outstrips the country's ability to exercise economic policy for its own social interests. Essentially built upon the premises of a core-periphery dependency paradigm, the periodic post-war reconfigurations of the EU architectural design offered enough room to the formation of a stricter policy framework along these lines. By developing a set of differentiated indices on European poverty, the devastating consequences of the belated neoliberal reformation of the country's welfare state are highlighted. All calculations are based on microdata sets of EUSILC surveys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Inequality through digitalization: investigation of mediating and moderating mechanisms.
- Author
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Zang, Leizhen, Zhu, Yifei, and Cheng, Di
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KUZNETS curve , *PANEL analysis , *INFORMATION economy , *INCOME inequality , *FIXED effects model ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper investigates how digitalization contributes to inclusive development by analyzing global panel data using fixed-effect models. The main finding is the reverse U-shaped relationship between digitalization and inequality reduction. By testing the moderation and mediation effects, we further illustrate the intricate dynamics of digitalization on inequality. The findings suggest that while digitalization fosters inclusive institutions, it may also foster polarized relationships. Furthermore, we demonstrate that reverse U-shaped effects are particularly pronounced in countries in the global south, indicating a diffusion of relational norms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. What contributes to rising inequality in large cities?
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Ayala, Luis, Martín‐Román, Javier, and Vicente, Juan
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INCOME distribution , *CITIES & towns , *INCOME inequality , *INCOME accounting , *COUNTERFACTUALS (Logic) - Abstract
This paper aims to analyze the trends in income inequality in large cities within a selected sample of OECD countries. Specifically, we consider a set of individual characteristics that account for changes in the income distribution and estimate their contribution to differences in inequality in large cities over the last two decades. We use a combination of reweighting techniques and recentered influence functions (RIF) to detect an upward trend in inequality within large cities. This result is mainly driven by changes in the returns to endowments rather than by changes in its distribution. Our findings suggest that these results are not of the same magnitude across the countries analyzed. A key finding is that the contribution to inequality of the skill premium is considerably higher in North American countries than in European countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. The Status Importance Scale: Development and validation of a self‐report questionnaire for measuring how much people care about status.
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Rigoli, Francesco and Mirolli, Marco
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SELF-evaluation , *INCOME , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ANXIETY , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *SOCIAL status , *RESEARCH methodology , *STATISTICAL reliability , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
Although substantial research indicates that considerations about status can lead to anxiety and other negative outcomes, a valid measure of the importance individuals attribute to status is lacking. This paper introduces the Status Importance Scale (SIS), a mono‐factorial 10‐item self‐report questionnaire that quantifies how important a person deems status to be. Five studies validate the scale showing that it has excellent internal reliability and acceptable test–retest reliability, it correlates with several related measures (supporting convergent validity), it shows little correlation with theoretically unrelated constructs (supporting discriminant validity), it is the best predictor of conspicuous consumption compared with other potential candidates (supporting concurrent validity), and it can help predicting which activities one gives importance to (further supporting concurrent validity). Finally, as hypothesized by previous literature, the last study reveals that the SIS can predict status anxiety. The SIS can contribute to research regarding important phenomena such as the detrimental psychological effects of income inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. The role of non‐base compensation in explaining the motherhood wage gap: Evidence from Italy.
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Badaoui, Eliane, Matteazzi, Eleonora, and Prete, Vincenzo
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INCOME inequality , *REGIONAL disparities , *LABOR incentives , *MOTHERHOOD , *FATHERHOOD - Abstract
This paper underlines the importance of accounting for non‐base compensation in explaining the motherhood wage gap. We consider two alternative measures of hourly wage using Italian EU‐SILC data from 2007 to 2019: the base‐wage and the full‐wage. The former refers to the contractual base wage, while the latter includes performance‐based bonuses, productivity bonuses, commissions, pay incentives, and other extra payments. We address the endogeneity issues of motherhood and examine the effect of motherhood status across various quantiles of the wage distribution for the two hourly wage measures. Empirical findings provide evidence of a motherhood base‐wage premium, which becomes nonsignificant when using the full‐wage measure, suggesting that non‐base compensation is a source of inequality for mothers. These findings are consistent across the wage distribution. Exploring potential heterogeneity across macro‐regions and periods, we find no notable regional disparities except minor distinctions for the Southern regions, alongside a decline in the base‐wage premium over time and the emergence of a full‐wage penalty in recent years. A comparative analysis with a sample of men reveals that fathers enjoy a premium with both wage measures. Nevertheless, fatherhood is also associated with reduced extra remunerations, yet to a lesser extent than motherhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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21. Income Interdependence in the UK Multi-Regional Economy: A Meso-Level Analysis.
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Carrascal-Incera, André and Hewings, Geoffrey J. D.
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CONSUMPTION (Economics) , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *INCOME , *INCOME inequality , *GROSS domestic product - Abstract
Consumer expenditures in the United Kingdom account for over 50% of Gross Domestic Product on the expenditure side, yet their impact on economic activity is often overshadowed by attention to technological change, value chain analysis and especially international trade. In this paper, a recently developed interregional model of the UK economy, SEIM (S ocio- E conomic I mpact M odel) will be used to provide some parallel perspectives to the role of interregional trade in goods and services by focusing on the interregional structure and impact of income and expenditures by households. Drawing on the original contributions of Miyazawa (1976) to highlight the contribution and structure of income interdependence complemented by interpretations offered by average propagation length, field of influence, and feedback loop analyses. The findings reveal the nature and strength of asymmetries in the structure of income formation and their impacts across the multiregional system. While there is only modest variation in aggregate income propagation by region, the accumulation of income is dominated by regions in the London area and secondarily by other metropolitan areas providing a source of explanation for the sustained income inequalities that have characterized the UK economy for almost a century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Effect of Energy Poverty Alleviation on High-Quality Economic Development: An Empirical Study Based on China.
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Yang, Fang and Gan, Qinfan
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ECONOMIC development , *REGIONAL development , *ENERGY infrastructure , *ENERGY development , *INCOME inequality - Abstract
High-quality development (HQD) has been listed as the first and foremost task in building a modern socialist country in all respects and also an overarching issue of China's economic and social development in the new era. To achieve economic HQD, a key approach lies in integrating energy development with poverty alleviation and fully leveraging the foundational role of energy infrastructure and supply services in reducing poverty. Using the provincial panel data from 2007 to 2017, this paper analyzes the impact of energy poverty alleviation on economic HQD from multiple dimensions in an empirical way and draws the following conclusions: first, energy poverty alleviation drives the economic growth of China's eastern region and western region, but it cannot effectively promote the synchronous economic growth of the central region, thereby resulting in a greater imbalance in regional development; second, energy poverty alleviation has an effect on reducing the urban–rural income inequality, and such an effect is more significant in the western region; and finally, energy poverty alleviation has a significant effect on promoting economic HQD, and the effect is more significant in the central region and the western region. Furthermore, the transmission mechanism of energy poverty alleviation driving HQD is tested. It is found that energy poverty alleviation can drive HQD by promoting urbanization and technological progress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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23. Escuela de Negocios, Universidad LaSalle.
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Campos-Vazquez, Raymundo M., Cepeda-Francese, Camilo A., Krozer, Alice, and Ramírez-Álvarez, Aurora A.
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MEXICANS , *METROPOLITAN areas , *INCOME inequality , *TAXATION , *RICH people - Abstract
Taxes play an essential role in financing development policies and correcting income inequalities. In this paper, we study the reasons behind the support among the Mexican population for increasing or introducing new taxes, under two different progressivity schemes. Through a face-to-face survey representative of Mexican metropolitan areas, we find that there is substantial support for increasing taxes for high-income groups and corporations. The introduction of new taxes for these groups has a mean support of 47.6% (in comparison with 19.5% for those without a threshold). Increasing taxes for these groups, on the other hand, has a mean support of 31.9% (in comparison with 7% for the taxes paid by the general population). This desire is mediated by the perception that high-income groups do not fulfill their tax obligations. We also find that factors traditionally related to equity and equality of opportunities are less relevant, which suggests that this support could be driven by the desire to equalize outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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24. How do economic, health, environmental and demographic factors affect life expectancy? – a novel attempt for developed and developing economies.
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Mimi, Mahinur Begum, Kibria, Md. Golam, and Selim, Md. Muhaiminul Islam
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CARBON emissions , *LIFE expectancy , *LONGEVITY , *LIFE spans , *INCOME inequality - Abstract
Policies throughout the world are presently focused on achieving a better quality of life and a longer life span through increased financial feasibility, ecological harmony, and economic stability. This effort seeks to empirically assess the impact of economic, health, environmental, and demographic factors on life expectancy in 36 high-income and 65 middle-income nations from 2000 to 2019. Using panels corrected standard errors (PCSEs) regression, this paper assures that high-income nations have significantly longer lifespans. The factors that lead most to this strengthening include GDP per capita, population growth, financial development, food production, and fertility rates. However, high-income countries tend to have shorter life expectancy due to rising mortality rates and carbon dioxide emissions. In middle-income nations, life expectancy falls significantly as a result of rising food production, health expenses, fertility rates, and economic hardship. Still, improving lifespan in middle-income nations is a result of multiple factors, including rising rates of GDP per capita, financial development, inequality in earnings between rural and urban places, and growing populations. The accuracy and credibility of the results are confirmed by using Driscoll-Kraay standard error estimates, feasible generalized least squares, random effect, and fixed effect approaches. The study's results point to the notion that these countries should put more emphasis on demographic and economic factors that lengthen life expectancy. Further, as health and environmental issues contribute to a shorter life expectancy, governments should place a greater priority on these fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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25. Mind the Gap: The Effects of Eliminating the Gender Pay Gap on Income and Poverty.
- Author
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Amaro, Francisca, Bastos, Amélia, Cruz, João, and Proença, Isabel
- Subjects
- *
GENDER wage gap , *INCOME , *INCOME inequality , *WOMEN employees , *HOUSEKEEPING - Abstract
This paper investigates the effects of eliminating Gender Pay Gap on income and poverty. Drawing upon the European Statistics on Income and Living Conditions for Portugal, we use econometric tools to estimate the counterfactual earnings. The results obtained over the period under study (2014, 2017 and 2019) show that the average hourly income of women would increase by around 38%; the average annual income of households with women in the labor market would be around 22% higher; the poverty indicators would fall by 5% points; single female households and Madeira region would show a more significant decline in poverty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The causality relationship between income inequality, debt, and economic growth in Sub-Saharan African countries1.
- Author
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Obiero, Wilkista Lore and Topuz, Seher Gülşah
- Subjects
- *
GINI coefficient , *WEALTH inequality , *INCOME inequality , *ECONOMIC expansion , *COUNTRIES - Abstract
This study aims to investigate the direction of causality between income inequality and growth, income inequality and debt, and debt and growth for 11 selected countries in SSA countries (Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia). The panel bootstrap causality approach is applied to these countries from 1980 to 2018. Inequality is represented using Gini coefficient, Palma ratio, and Theil index. The findings show that there is at least a one-way causal relationship between public debt and inequality in Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda, between inequality and growth in Botswana, Lesotho, Nigeria, and South Africa and between growth and debt in Botswana, Rwanda, South Africa, and Uganda. Empirical results imply that the relations between the relevant variables in the Sub-Saharan African countries may vary according to the specific characteristics of these countries. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first paper to analyse the impact of these three macroeconomic variables together. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Economic Disparities, Life Events, and the Gender Mental Health Gap.
- Author
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Nguyen, Thi Thao, Nguyen, Kim Huong, and Rohde, Nicholas
- Subjects
- *
LIFE change events , *HEALTH equity , *INCOME inequality , *VICTIMS of violent crimes , *MENTAL health - Abstract
This paper studies factors explaining the gender mental health gap using Australian data. We show that men have significantly higher mean outcomes and the left tail of the combined distribution is disproportionately female. Using regression-based decompositions, we examine the degree that both socioeconomic inequalities and life experience account for this phenomenon. We find that disparities in income play a substantial role, and subject to an assumption of exogeneity, would be enough to account for the gender gap amongst individuals with very poor psychological wellbeing. We also examine the mental health effects of various negative life experience, such as the death of a family member or being a victim of violence. At the individual level, these variables have large effect sizes but are not strongly correlated with gender to explain our mental health disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. “Agricultural to Non-agricultural” Ways and Chinese Labor Market Differentiation: Endowment Difference or Identity Discrimination?
- Author
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Ren, Yuzhuo, Zheng, Linhao, Dai, Wei, and Cheng, Mengyao
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *RURAL population , *STATISTICAL bias , *CITY dwellers , *CITIES & towns , *URBANIZATION - Abstract
Different methods of transforming rural migrants’ household registration can affect their integration into citizenship. This study assesses the impact of different rural-to- urban hukou conversion methods on labor market wages and job entry, utilizing empirical analysis with China General Social Survey (CGSS) data. Rural migrants transitioning to urban hukou are categorized as active or passive “agricultural to non-agricultural” groups. Wage disparities between these groups are analyzed using the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition method, revealing that 50% of the wage gap remains unexplained by individual characteristics. Additionally, this paper explores factors contributing to wage and job entry differences using OLS regression analysis. Empirical findings indicate that discrimination significantly contributes to the wage and job entry gap between passive and active groups, with primary mechanisms including statistical bias, information acquisition differences, and identity challenges. These results underscore the inevitable transition of the agricultural population to urban areas in emerging nations’ development trajectory. However, challenges may arise during this transformation, particularly in China, where passive “agricultural to non-agricultural” individuals face discrimination. Addressing the rights and interests of this group is crucial for ensuring smooth urbanization in China and offers insights to improve urbanization efforts in developing nations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Public welfare donation, rent sharing, and income gap within enterprises.
- Author
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Chen, Jiantao, Luo, Xiang, and Wang, Xiao
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *INCOME gap , *CORPORATE taxes , *PUBLIC welfare , *WAGES , *PER capita - Abstract
This study utilizes data from A-share listed companies between 2011 and 2020 to empirically investigate the impact and mechanism of public welfare donations on the internal income gap of enterprises. The research findings indicate that public welfare donations significantly increase the per capita salary of management, while their impact on the per capita salary of ordinary employees is not significant, thus leading to an expansion of the internal income gap within enterprises. The results from mechanism testing reveal that the income tax benefits resulting from charitable donations and the rise in corporate operating income have contributed to an increase in excess rent shared by enterprises and employees. Due to a stronger bargaining power, management shares more excess rents, thereby widening the income gap within the enterprise. Heterogeneity analysis demonstrates that public welfare donations have a greater impact on the internal income gap of non-state-owned enterprises; however, limiting executive compensation and enhancing employees' bargaining power can mitigate this widening effect caused by public welfare donations on enterprise's internal income gap. The research value of this study is threefold. Firstly, there is a scarcity of studies on the impact of public welfare donations on the income gap within enterprises, and this study contributes to enriching the research in this area. Secondly, this paper examines the effect of tax incentives for public welfare donations on the internal income gap of enterprises, thereby deepening the research on the impact of tax reduction and fee reduction, as well as expanding our understanding of corporate income tax preferential policies. Thirdly, it offers insights into improving enterprise compensation systems and enhancing corporate governance. Senior executives can potentially allocate more excess rent through their strong bargaining power. If their compensation remains unrestricted, it may lead to a widening internal income gap and negatively affect company operational efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Shadow economy-income inequality nexus: a panel analysis of West African countries.
- Author
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Ajide, Folorunsho M., Dada, James Temitope, Al-Faryan, Mamdouh Abdulaziz Saleh, and Tabash, Mosab I.
- Subjects
- *
PANEL analysis , *INCOME inequality , *INFORMAL sector - Abstract
This paper examines the nexus between shadow economy and income inequality in the West African region. The study applies second-generation panel estimation techniques to analyze the effect and the direction of causation between the variables. The results reveal that the shadow economy reduces income inequality in the region in both short-run and long-run estimations. A similar result is documented when alternative estimation techniques are employed. In addition, the panel causality results show a bidirectional relationship between shadow economy and income inequality in the West African economy. The implications of the study are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Understanding Environmental NGOs’ Inclusiveness: A Comparative Analysis of Two Australian Climate Action Groups.
- Author
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Chang, Patrick
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change mitigation , *PROCEDURAL justice , *INCOME inequality , *GUN control , *DOMESTIC violence - Abstract
It is a perennial challenge for different political organisations, including environmental NGOs (ENGOs), to accommodate diverse social and political groups’ interests, opinions, and experiences. Without sufficient inclusiveness, ENGOs struggle to help create social and political change at a much faster pace, with climate action in Australia being a key example. In this regard, this paper argues that inclusiveness needs to encompass three dimensions, diversity, equity, and procedural justice, which are critical to managing internal tensions, disagreements, and conflicts. Evidence from two different ENGOs, the Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) and Extinction Rebellion Australia (XR Aus), shows that despite different types of organisational structures and resource availability, there are different challenges and opportunities for the two ENGOs in trying to establish and maintain higher inclusiveness. While diversity remains challenging to both groups, XR Aus’s self-organising and decentralisation have much easier access to decision-making and autonomous participation than ACF. However, it remains to be seen if XR Aus could harass its organising features to establish and maintain a higher level of procedural justice. These findings are relevant not only to issues in climate action problems but also to other collective action problems such as ethnics equality, domestic violence, income disparity, and gun control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Perceived economic inequality enlarges the perceived humanity gap between low- and high-socioeconomic status groups.
- Author
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Sainz, Mario, Martínez, Rocío, Matamoros-Lima, Juan, Moya, Miguel, and Rodríguez-Bailón, Rosa
- Subjects
- *
WEALTH inequality , *INCOME inequality , *SOCIOECONOMIC status , *HUMANITY , *EVERYDAY life - Abstract
In this paper, we analyze the influence of the perceived level of economic inequality in daily life on people's recognition of the perceived humanity gap between low- and high-socioeconomic groups within society. To achieve this purpose, in Studies 1A–B, we analyzed the relationship between economic inequality and the humanity gap. In Studies 2A–B, we manipulated the level of inequality (low vs. high) to identify differences in the humanity gap. Results indicated that higher perceptions of economic inequality lead individuals to recognize a wider humanity gap between low- and high-socioeconomic groups in society. Implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Innovation and wage inequalities: Evidence from Brazilian regions.
- Author
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de Oliveira, Bianca Villamarim, Gonçalves, Eduardo, and Taveira, Juliana Gonçalves
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *FIXED effects model , *FOREIGN investments , *SOCIAL skills education , *PERSONAL belongings , *PER capita - Abstract
Innovation can lead to wage inequalities through different channels. This paper explores this relationship, focusing on the direct and spillover (indirect) effects of these channels on personal wage inequalities in Brazilian regions. Product and process innovation are measured by patents and the acquisition of foreign technology through imports of capital goods respectively. Based on data that covers 482 regions from 2003 to 2014, we use the Spatial Durbin Model with spatial fixed effects to control spatial dependence and heterogeneity across regions. The results point to a positive association between our measures of innovation and wage inequalities. However, as we found a non‐linear relationship between imports of capital goods and wage inequality, an increase in imports of capital goods may reduce wage inequality. Other variables may also cause inequality to fall, such as the share of the population with a higher education degree and social skills. Drivers behind an increase in inequality are female participation in the workforce and the level of GDP per capita. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
34. High relational mobility is associated with perceiving more economic inequality in everyday life.
- Author
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Willis, Guillermo B., Uchida, Yukiko, García‐Castro, Juan Diego, and Takemura, Kosuke
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE -- Psychological aspects , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOCIAL networks , *COMMUNICATION , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *HEALTH equity , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
In this paper, we argue that one of the variables that may influence perceived inequality in everyday life is cultural differences in relational mobility. We examined this research question across two cross‐cultural studies in Japan (Study 1, N = 196; Study 2, N = 214) and Spain (Study 1, N = 199; Study 2, 199), two countries that differ in their relational mobility levels. In Study 1, we contrasted two competing hypotheses: On the one hand, it could be predicted that individuals in countries with high relational mobility perceive greater inequality due to increased exposure to diverse social networks. On the other hand, it is also plausible that in contexts of high relational mobility, people perceive less inequality as they selectively choose to interact with individuals who share similar social backgrounds. Results supported the former hypotheses and showed that people in a country high in relational mobility (i.e. Spain) tend to perceive more economic inequality (vs. Japan, a country low in relational mobility). Moreover, we found an indirect effect of this cross‐cultural difference through the cultural affordances for meeting new people (i.e. one of the dimensions of relational mobility). In Study 2, we preregistered and replicated these results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Minimum and Living Wages in Jordan and Tunisia.
- Author
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Krafft, Caroline and Hannafi, Cyrine
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *LIVING wage movement , *JOB descriptions , *JOB skills , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *MINIMUM wage - Abstract
Countries around the world are working to develop social protection floors to help reduce poverty. Ensuring workers can earn adequate wages is an important component of social protection floors. In this paper, we explore who receives minimum, poverty, median, and living wages in Jordan, comparing 2010 and 2016, and in Tunisia in 2014. We demonstrate that while the majority of workers do earn at least minimum and poverty wages, only a minority of workers earn a living wage. The chances of earning minimum, poverty, median, and living wages depend on the characteristics of workplaces, specific work characteristics (especially job formality and skills required), and the demographic characteristics of workers. While results are consistent with wages reflecting, in part, workers' productivity, they may also reflect rents, efficiency wages, and for minimum wages issues with enforceability and policy design. These findings highlight which workers are vulnerable to low earnings and where greater enforcement or redesign of minimum wage legislation might be needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Inequality, macroeconomic performance and political polarization: a panel analysis of 20 advanced democracies.
- Author
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Proaño, Christian R., Peña, Juan Carlos, and Saalfeld, Thomas
- Subjects
- *
POLARIZATION (Social sciences) , *PANEL analysis , *CORPORATE profits , *INCOME inequality ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This paper investigates the macroeconomic and social determinants of voting behavior, and especially of political polarization – defined here as the increasing electoral success of far-right and far-left parties – in 20 advanced countries using annual data from 1970 to 2016 and covering 291 parliamentary elections. Our analysis indicates that the link between income inequality and political polarization appears to have significantly changed over the last 20 years. Indeed, we find that both average net income inequality, as well as the bottom 10% income share are statistically linked to the recent success of far-right parties (but not of far-left parties), while the top 10% or top 20% income shares are not. The link of income inequality and political polarization, and in particular the increasing success of far-right parties, thus seems to be based on the deterioration of the relative economic position especially of the poorest fraction of the population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Current account imbalance and the inequality ratio of income to consumption: evidence from China and other Asian countries.
- Author
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Lei, Chunyu, Liu, Nian, Guo, Fei, Chen, Junmei, Yang, Wanyu, and Yang, Guotao
- Subjects
- *
BALANCE of payments , *POOR people , *INCOME inequality , *DEFICIT financing , *CONSUMER credit - Abstract
This paper deals with global imbalances as an increasingly important issue in our age. While the literature establishes that current accounts are inversely related to the ratio of income to consumption inequality in OECD, our study finds that this relationship is reversed in Asia. That ratio has much to do with various schemes of consumption smoothing, which are affected by policy interventions to alleviate the effects of rising income inequality. Different policies may generate opposite outcomes. In OECD, policy encourages consumer credit and deficit spending among low-income people so that consumption inequality is kept artificially low, leading up to a current account deficit. In Asia, policy promotes output growth via high savings with no well-developed smoothing schemes designed to help poor households, so that consumption inequality moves in line with income inequality, with excess savings recycled into a current account surplus. Hence, any reduction in global imbalances requires both regions to adjust their policies for mitigating income inequality and optimizing smoothing schemes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Impact of the Project of Returning Farmland to Forests on Narrowing the Income Gap of Rural Households -- Empirical Analysis Based on 3 231 Sample Rural Households.
- Author
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KONG Fanbinl, WANG Yongchengl, LU Yu, XU Caiyao, and ZHAI Jun
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *INCOME , *GINI coefficient , *INCOME gap , *LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
(1) Background-How to steadily increase the income of low-income rural households and narrow the income gap of rural households through ecological protection and restoration projects is related to the sustainable development of ecological protection and restoration projects. It is necessary to analyze the impact of the project of returning farmland to forest on the income gap of rural households from a new perspective of the income increase and common prosperity effect of ecological projects, so as to provide a basis for the income increase effect of ecological protection and restoration projects and promote common prosperity. (2) Methods-This paper first proposed the research hypotheses based on the literature review and theoretical analysis. Then, based on the large-scale micro-sample data of 3 231 sample rural households from 25 provinces in the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) Database from 2011 to 2020, Using the Recentered Influence Function ( RIF) model, this paper analyzed the impact of the project of returning farmland to forests on the income gap of rural households and its multi-dimensional heterogeneity characteristics. (3) Results-First, the project of returning farmland to forests has significantly increased the rural households ' income and narrowed the income gap between the rural households. The Gini coefficient decreased by 3.078 for every l% increase in the subsidy for returning farmland to forests. After replacing the explained and explanatory variables, the Gini coefficient remains stable. Second, the income gap of the rural households who returned farmland to forests was smaller than that of the rural households who did not return farmland to forests, and their income quantile range and Gini coefficient were significantly lower than those who did not return farmland to forests. Third, the effect of the project of returning farmland to forests on narrowing the income gap of the rural households who continuously returned farmland to forests was greater than that of the rural households who did not continuously return farmland to forests. Fourth, the impact of the project of returning farmland to forests on the farmers with lower education was more obvious than that of the farmers with higher education. (4) Conclusions and Discussions-First, pay attention to the effect of the subsidy for returning farmland to forests to increase the rural households' income, give full play to the social security role of the subsidy (or returning farmland to forests, and appropriately raise the subsidy standards. Second, increase the attention and support for the low-income rural households, the rural households who returned farmland to forests on a larger scale and other groups with weak income growth, promote the development assistance and public policies, and further improve the relevant policies of the project of returning farmland to forests. Third, appropriately extend the subsidy period, while combining the local natural ecological conditions and resource factors endowment, encourage the farmers to plant economic forests. Fourth, implement the distribution policy of subsidies for returning farmland to forests in a targeted manner, and strengthen the agricultural technology training and employment guidance for the farmers with low education levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Impact of Income Inequality on Health Levels: Empirical Evidence from China:2002–2016.
- Author
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Zhao, Jinkai, Yang, Wanping, and Zhao, Kai
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *HEALTH equity , *STANDARD of living , *SIMULTANEOUS equations , *EQUALITY - Abstract
Income inequality had been one of the important manifestations of social inequality, which can affect the health level by affecting savings, health care and living standards. Existing researches about the relationship between income inequality and health ignored the comprehensive characteristic of health concept, and did not consider the intrinsic relationship between health and income inequality. This paper attempts to re-shed light on the relationship. Firstly, this paper constructs a new health level evaluation system from three aspects: health basis, health environment and behavior, and health security. By means of the combination evaluation method, the health levels can be obtained. Then, considering the interaction between health and income inequality, a simultaneous equation group model is constructed to empirically test the relationship between income inequality and health levels in China. The results reveal that health level is negatively correlated with income inequality. Reducing income inequality plays an important role in improving health levels in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Mechanisms of the effect of fertility policies on the labor-capital income gap.
- Author
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Cui, Wei, Wan, An-Wei, and Zheng, Yuan
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *INCOME gap , *FERTILITY , *INCOME , *LABOR policy - Abstract
This paper investigates the impact mechanism by which an incentive-based fertility policy may reduce the labor income share. First, the specific paths through which this impact mechanism is realized are analyzed using the production function. It is found that an incentive-based fertility policy triggers high savings, which implies more, cheaper, and more readily available capital to be invested in production. A distribution system that earns income based on factor contributions results in more gains for capital than labor, i.e., a lower share of labor income and a wider income gap between labor and capital. Second, the impact mechanism includes three theoretical hypotheses. They are that an encouraging fertility policy is negatively related to labor income share; this relationship is valid provided that the study subject is in a closed economy; and that capital intensification is a mediator variable of fertility policy affecting labor income share. Finally, to further corroborate the impact mechanism in this paper, a Hansen threshold panel model is applied to verify that the effect of fertility policy on labor income share has a threshold effect. This indicates that the effect of the former on the latter changes significantly before and after the change in fertility policy, confirming the existence of an impact mechanism. The established literature has paid little attention to the impact of incentivised fertility policies on the labour income gap. Using capital intensification as the mediating variable, this paper demonstrates the existence of the former effect on the latter. In view of this, under the encouraged fertility policy, this paper proposes specific measures to enhance the labor income share in order to narrow the income gap between labor and capital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Does pay inequality affect worker effort? An assessment of experimental designs and evidence.
- Author
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Fongoni, Marco
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *GIFT giving , *CIVIL service , *FAIRNESS - Abstract
This paper develops a theoretical framework to think about employees' effort choices, and applies this framework to assess the ability of existing experimental designs to identify the effect of pay inequality on worker effort. The analysis shows that failure to control for a number of confounds—such as reciprocity towards the employer in multi-lateral gift-exchange games (vertical fairness), or the incentive to increase effort when feeling underpaid under piece rates (income targeting)—may lead to inaccurate interpretation of evidence of treatment effects. In light of these findings, the paper provides a set of recommendations on how to improve identification in the design of controlled experiments in the future. • We develop a model to study employees' effort choices in experiments. • We formally assess the design of experiments on the effect of pay inequality on effort. • We find a number of confounds that may impair identification of treatment effects. • Confounds include vertical fairness, income targeting, repeated interactions, procedural fairness. • A set of recommendations to improve identification in experiments is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Redistribution Methods for Income Equality in the United States.
- Author
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Jihyeon Sung
- Subjects
- *
INCOME distribution , *WEALTH inequality , *BUSINESS tax , *POVERTY - Abstract
Redistribution for income equality is a contentious issue, with advocates citing increased economic stability and skeptics fearing potential negative impacts on economic growth. The United States (U.S.) faces notably high income inequality compared to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) average, with wealth concentrated in the top brackets. This paper critically examines the existing U.S. redistribution methods, including the taxation system and welfare programs, highlighting challenges such as the lack of tax progressiveness in top brackets and limited redistribution compared to European counterparts. Based on this overview, the study evaluates alternative redistribution strategies, including wealth and business taxes. The paper compares theory with insights from pilot programs in other countries. Finally, the paper argues for a universal basic income (UBI) set at per-capita welfare spending, positing that this approach can empower individuals to escape poverty traps, enhance productivity, and introduce a choice mechanism for welfare consumption. Ultimately, this research seeks to propose the most effective and feasible income redistribution policies for the U.S. to bridge the income inequality gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Conceptualizing the Environment in a Time of Ecological Collapse.
- Author
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Withagen, Rob, van der Kamp, John, and Woods, Carl T.
- Subjects
- *
WEALTH inequality , *INCOME inequality , *ENVIRONMENTAL psychology , *POLITICAL stability , *GLOBAL warming - Abstract
AbstractWe live in troubling times. Amongst global political instability, rising economic inequality and a rapacious Western consumerist lifestyle, we face the impending risks of global warming and ecological collapse. In this short opinion paper, we bring this topic to the agenda of ecological psychology in the hope of stimulating fruitful conversation. To do so, we ask how ecological psychologists should conceptualize the environment in these precarious times. We will argue that the current ecological catastrophe shows that the environment should not be described simply in terms of affordances, but as an ecosystem on which many affordances depend. Not only does this conceptualization hold scientific implications, it speaks to an active morality that could help us change our ways, and play our part in holding open a just future for all. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The reactionary turn in popular feminism.
- Author
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Kay, Jilly Boyce
- Subjects
- *
WEALTH inequality , *INCOME inequality , *POPULAR culture , *GENDER inequality , *FEMINISTS , *FEMINISM , *MISOGYNY - Abstract
This paper considers the rise of “reactionary feminism” within popular culture, suggesting a possible departure from, or mutation of, the hegemony of neoliberal and postfeminisms of recent decades. It locates reactionary feminism as key to the growing backlash against “liberal feminism,” pointing to emergent popular feminist discourses of “brutal truths,” “material conditions,” and women as a “sex class.” I analyse three seemingly diverse iterations of the reactionary feminist turn: its political-intellectual articulation by anti-progressive, “post-liberal” feminists; secondly, its manifestation within the “femosphere” - the online, female-centric communities which mirror those of the manosphere—focusing specifically on the “Female Dating Strategy;” and thirdly, “dark feminine” dating influencers on TikTok and YouTube, sometimes framed as “Andrew Tate for girls.” Reactionary feminism
appears to have certain similarities with leftist, intersectional feminism; it has a strong critique of liberal feminism, and explicitly centres issues such as misogyny, the devaluation of women’s work, gendered economic inequality, and the politics of care. However, I argue that while it purports to oppose misogyny and the manosphere, it mirrors many of its regressive logics, and is characterised by an aggressive sense of fatalism, bio-essentialism, and a deep animosity towards liberationist feminism and any form of social hope. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Perceptions of the social status hierarchy and its cultural and economic sources.
- Author
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BREYER, MAGDALENA
- Subjects
- *
CLASS politics , *INCOME inequality , *WEALTH inequality , *SOCIAL forces , *POLITICAL science , *RESENTMENT - Abstract
This paper applies a conjoint experiment to assess the sources of contemporary social status hierarchies in Western Europe. Social status has become a popular concept in political science to explain resentment against economic and cultural transformations. However, we do not know whether cultural sources like race and gender have an independent causal effect on social status perceptions. Furthermore, these characteristics may be more contested between societal subgroups and thus have a weaker stratifying effect than income or occupation. This study employs an innovative conjoint experiment, conducted in Switzerland, to systematically assess the multidimensional sources of status. The design asks respondents to place profiles with randomized criteria and thus captures intersubjective status perceptions. In contrast to evaluating one's own placement on the social status hierarchy, placing others provides more accurate insights about the structural force of social status. The results show that both economic and cultural sources strongly shape social status, with occupation, race/ethnicity and income being most important. Furthermore, different subgroups agree on the hierarchy no matter their own status. This study helps to understand the structural roots of political resentment by showing that both cultural and economic inequalities are recognized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Novel credibility approaches for Lorenz curve and Gini coefficient estimation.
- Author
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Wen, Limin, Cao, Ruyi, and Zhang, Yi
- Subjects
- *
GINI coefficient , *LORENZ curve , *INCOME inequality , *ASYMPTOTIC normality , *WEALTH distribution - Abstract
The Lorenz curve and Gini coefficient are prominent statistical tools used in various fields to measure income inequality, wealth distribution, and other distributions of resources within a population. However, traditional estimations of Lorenz curve and Gini coefficient often overlook the utilization of prior information, relying solely on sample data. This paper adopts credibility theory principles to propose a novel approach, combining empirical and collective Lorenz curves through weighted estimation. By optimizing these weights under the integral square loss function, the study derives two credibility estimations for the Lorenz curve and Gini coefficient. Asymptotic properties of these estimations are established, and numerical simulations validate the comparison of their small-sample properties with traditional methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Relative Standing and Political Participation.
- Author
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Fransman, Tina and von Fintel, Marisa
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL participation , *PUBLIC demonstrations , *INCOME inequality , *INCOME , *SOUTH Africans - Abstract
The significance of absolute income has consistently been highlighted in the literature as an important factor shaping individuals' propensity to engage in political participation. However, considerably less research has been done on the relationship between relative income and individuals' propensity to engage in both conventional and unconventional forms of political participation. Using relative income to quantify relative standing, this paper explores the relationship between relative standing and political participation in South Africa. Results show that individuals' relative standing had a divergent relationship with their propensity to engage in voting and protest. More specifically, the results showed that South Africans with a higher relative standing, i.e., those who experienced relative privilege were more likely to engage in voting, while those with a lower relative standing, i.e., those who experienced relative deprivation, were more likely to engage in protest participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Wage Disparities in Academia for Engineering Women of Color and the Limitations of Advocacy and Agency.
- Author
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McGee, Ebony, Cox, Monica F., Main, Joyce B., Miles, Monica L., and Hailu, Meseret F.
- Subjects
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RACE discrimination , *WOMEN'S wages , *INCOME inequality , *INSTITUTIONAL racism , *ALASKA Natives , *INDIGENOUS women - Abstract
The devaluation of women of Color (WoC) by way of gender discrimination and systemic racism is well documented. For WoC in engineering a chief cause is the observable wage gap. Women who identify as Asian, Black/African American, Latina/Chicana, Indigenous/Native American, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, Native Alaskan, and/or multiracial have reported stark wage disparities. In this paper, we offer a phenomenological study of how WoC engineering faculty across U.S. academic institutions describe the challenges and practices associated with wage disparities and how they navigate these disparities. This study, which is based on participant interviews, is guided by three research questions: (1) What do WoC engineering tenure-track faculty perceive about wage disparities based on their race and gender? (2) How do WoC faculty understand the institutional practices that contribute to wage disparities? and (3) How do WoC engineering faculty respond to and address wage disparities? Using structural racism and intersectionality as our guiding conceptual framework, we interviewed 32 self-identified WoC who identified structures and systems of institutional racism related to the maintenance of wage disparities. In terms of findings, we note that WoC have two primary strategies to respond to wage disparity: advocacy and agency. The experiences of WoC engineering faculty in our study highlight unsatisfying institutional responses, and thus WoC often rely on their own agency to advocate for themselves and to advocate for and mentor other WoC faculty. We found a few notable cases where men advocated for women to help close the wage gap. Our work reveals that pay inequity for WoC is often coupled with other forms of exclusion and marginalization. Reducing wage disparities in academia is critical to advancing diversity efforts and ensuring equitable support for WoC faculty. Our findings suggest that institutions can work diligently to rectify wage inequality, including making sustainable structural and salary modifications and sharing the burden of combatting wage inequities. Finally, our findings also highlight the importance of making policy changes to reduce pay inequalities, such as providing transparent pay information and more opportunities to earn merit raises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Can digital financial inclusion converge the regional agricultural carbon emissions intensity gap?
- Author
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Tan, Lingzhi, Tian, Nuolan, Li, Xiaxuan, and Chen, Huan
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AGRICULTURAL pollution , *CARBON emissions , *CARBON dioxide mitigation , *INCOME inequality , *AGRICULTURAL technology , *GINI coefficient , *TECHNOLOGY convergence - Abstract
To explore whether digital finance can reduce agricultural carbon emissions, promote regional convergence, and foster inclusivity in rural revitalization and shared prosperity, this paper uses the provincial-level index of digital financial inclusion to analyze the impact of digital financial inclusion on the intensity of agricultural carbon emissions and the Degum Gini coefficient (D-Gini coefficient) of regional carbon emission intensity in 30 sample provinces from 2010 to 2020. It examines the mechanism of the impact of digital financial inclusion on both variables to understand the underlying factors better. The main conclusions are as follows: (1) Digital financial inclusion significantly reduces the intensity of agricultural carbon emissions and narrows the gap in carbon emission intensity between regions. (2) The unconditional quantile regression coefficients show that the negative coefficients of the digital financial inclusion index and the three-dimensional indices decrease with increasing quantiles. However, the significant effects vary significantly at different quantiles. (3) Technological progress and the government's ability to allocate financial resources play a significant mediating role, and the income gap between urban and rural areas can be further narrowed, as well as the carbon emission intensity gap between provinces. The empirical results are robust and proven by replacing the econometric analysis method, changing the core variables, and other methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Income change and sympathy for right‐wing populist parties in the Netherlands: The role of gender and income inequality within households.
- Author
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Roll, Yoav and De Graaf, Nan Dirk
- Subjects
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RIGHT-wing populism , *INCOME inequality , *INCOME , *POPULIST parties (Politics) , *SYMPATHY , *GENDER inequality , *SOCIAL dominance , *GROUNDED theory - Abstract
The global rise of right‐wing populist [RWP] parties presents a major political concern. RWP parties' voters tend to be citizens who have either experienced or fear economic deprivation. Income change constitutes a viable measure of this deprivation. However, previous contributions examining effects of income change on support for RWP parties have yielded diverging conclusions. This paper challenges previous findings by incorporating considerations of gender and within‐household inequality. We hypothesise a negative relationship between, on the one hand, personal and household income change and, on the other hand, sympathy towards RWP parties. Furthermore, we expect to find a stronger association between personal income change and RWP sympathy among men. Moreover, we expect the relationship between household income change and RWP sympathy to differ between genders. Finally, we hypothesise that this gender disparity can be interpreted by considering who contributes most to the household income. All these hypotheses are grounded in gender socialisation and economic dominance theories. Analysing Dutch LISS longitudinal data spanning from 2007 to 2021 (
N = 7,801,n = 43,954) through fixed‐effects multilevel linear regression models enables us to address various competing explanations. It appears that only for men, personal income change is negatively linked with sympathies towards RWP parties. However, considering who is the highest earner within households reveals that women are also affected by their personal income change if they earn the highest income. For both men and women, household income change is negatively linked with sympathies towards RWP parties. These results lend partial support to both the socialisation and economic dominance theories. The implications of these findings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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