Does public opinion react to inequality, and if so, how? The social harms caused by increasing inequality should cause public opinion to ramp up demand for social welfare protections. However, the public may react to inequality differently depending on institutional context. Using ISSP and WID data (1980‒2006), we tested these claims. In liberal institutional contexts (mostly English‐speaking), increasing income inequality predicted higher support for state provision of social welfare. In coordinated and universalist contexts (mostly of Europe), increasing inequality predicted less support. Historically higher income concentration predicted less public support, providing an account of the large variation in inequality within the respective ...
The growth of income and wealth inequality has led to greater political influence for the 1 percent....
This article explores how preferences for redistribution among voters are affected by th...
This book is about inequality, how the state affects distribution through its spending programs and ...
Does public opinion react to inequality, and if so, how? The social harms caused by increasing inequ...
This article assesses the influence of income inequality on the public’s policy mood. Recent work ha...
Abstract Income inequality has been rising substantially over the past few decades in the United Sta...
The relation between income inequality and support for redistributive policies has long being debate...
The onset of the Great Recession has brought income inequality to the forefront of political debate ...
Is the political support for welfare policy higher or lower in less egalitarian societies? We answer...
This dissertation argues that public opinion regarding the acceptability and desirability of income ...
How tightly linked are the strength of a country’s welfare state and its residents’ supp...
This dissertation employs quantitative techniques including random and fixed effects linear regressi...
This dissertation focuses on the political responses to income inequality. Multiple critical puzzles...
This paper assesses the influence of income inequality on the public’s policy mood. Recent work has ...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
The growth of income and wealth inequality has led to greater political influence for the 1 percent....
This article explores how preferences for redistribution among voters are affected by th...
This book is about inequality, how the state affects distribution through its spending programs and ...
Does public opinion react to inequality, and if so, how? The social harms caused by increasing inequ...
This article assesses the influence of income inequality on the public’s policy mood. Recent work ha...
Abstract Income inequality has been rising substantially over the past few decades in the United Sta...
The relation between income inequality and support for redistributive policies has long being debate...
The onset of the Great Recession has brought income inequality to the forefront of political debate ...
Is the political support for welfare policy higher or lower in less egalitarian societies? We answer...
This dissertation argues that public opinion regarding the acceptability and desirability of income ...
How tightly linked are the strength of a country’s welfare state and its residents’ supp...
This dissertation employs quantitative techniques including random and fixed effects linear regressi...
This dissertation focuses on the political responses to income inequality. Multiple critical puzzles...
This paper assesses the influence of income inequality on the public’s policy mood. Recent work has ...
We propose a political reinforcement hypothesis, suggesting that rising inequality moves party polit...
The growth of income and wealth inequality has led to greater political influence for the 1 percent....
This article explores how preferences for redistribution among voters are affected by th...
This book is about inequality, how the state affects distribution through its spending programs and ...