This paper provides new stylized facts on how support for redistribution in the United Stated has changed over time. Since detecting structural changes in individual attitudes requires long periods of time, we used repeated cross-sectional data from the General Social Survey (GSS) cumulative Datafile that include twenty crosssectional surveys and span a period of over thirty years (1978–2010). A multilevel logistic model with timevarying slopes and two independent levels of variation allowed us to capture temporal patterns net of age and cohort effects. Despite an overall flat trend in demand for redistribution, we find that driving factors in shaping redistributive preferences have changed considerably over time. These changes are little i...
A main activity of the state is to redistribute resources. Standard political economy models predict...
A main activity of the state is to redistribute resources. Standard political economy models predict...
In an era of rising inequality, the U.S. public’s relatively modest support for redistributive polic...
This paper provides new stylized facts on how support for redistribution in the United Stated has ch...
When do attitudes towards inequality change? Scholars have examined why publics change their attitud...
© 2019, © 2019 European Sociological Association. This paper investigates whether economic indicator...
The central argument advanced by the dissertation is that three key sources of variation are critica...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
The poor favour redistribution and the rich oppose it, but that is not all. Social mobility may make...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
This dissertation is composed of two essays. The first chapter "The Impact of Government Programs on...
Citizens’ support for redistribution varies largely between and within countries. An important empir...
International audiencePeople's preferences for state intervention in social policies vary. A cross-s...
While most Americans appear to acknowledge the large gap between the rich and the poor in the U.S., ...
Although economic circumstances have been argued to be a major determining factor of attitudes to re...
A main activity of the state is to redistribute resources. Standard political economy models predict...
A main activity of the state is to redistribute resources. Standard political economy models predict...
In an era of rising inequality, the U.S. public’s relatively modest support for redistributive polic...
This paper provides new stylized facts on how support for redistribution in the United Stated has ch...
When do attitudes towards inequality change? Scholars have examined why publics change their attitud...
© 2019, © 2019 European Sociological Association. This paper investigates whether economic indicator...
The central argument advanced by the dissertation is that three key sources of variation are critica...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
The poor favour redistribution and the rich oppose it, but that is not all. Social mobility may make...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
This dissertation is composed of two essays. The first chapter "The Impact of Government Programs on...
Citizens’ support for redistribution varies largely between and within countries. An important empir...
International audiencePeople's preferences for state intervention in social policies vary. A cross-s...
While most Americans appear to acknowledge the large gap between the rich and the poor in the U.S., ...
Although economic circumstances have been argued to be a major determining factor of attitudes to re...
A main activity of the state is to redistribute resources. Standard political economy models predict...
A main activity of the state is to redistribute resources. Standard political economy models predict...
In an era of rising inequality, the U.S. public’s relatively modest support for redistributive polic...