This cumulative dissertation analyzes public opinion on policies that redistribute income: progressive taxes and targeted social transfers. It primarily explains why individuals and countries support more or less redistribution. The fundamental expectation is that people are driven by two motives: to expand and maintain their disposable income (“self-interest”) and to ensure a fair distribution of income (“fairness”). Those with less (more) income, those who expect to lose (gain) income, and those who find the current income distribution unfair (fair) should demand more (less) redistribution. While these theories are drawn from previous research, I revise common theoretical approaches to arrive at a deeper understanding of public opinion. ...
This paper shows that perceptions of inequality matter for demand for redistribution and investigate...
What matters for individuals’ preferences for redistribution? In this paper we show that consequenti...
In this dissertation I rely on attitudinal and subjective well-being data from Transition Economies ...
This dissertation is composed of two essays. The first chapter "The Impact of Government Programs on...
This dissertation is a collection of four essays that question the behavioral assumptions of economi...
This dissertation addresses the connections between politics and economic inequality. Although the m...
This paper describes subjective wage inequality and the demand for redistribution in Austrianusing i...
This paper describes subjective wage inequality and the demand for redistribution in Austria using i...
My thesis mainly discusses the extent of redistribution in a democratic society. In poor and unequa...
The central argument advanced by the dissertation is that three key sources of variation are critica...
This dissertation focuses on the political responses to income inequality. Multiple critical puzzles...
Using survey data from a cross-section of European countries, this paper analyzes the determinants o...
We examine whether individuals' experienced levels of income inequality affect their preferences for...
"This paper explores the determinants of individual level support for income redistribution by the g...
We survey the literature on preferences for redistribution. We discuss different ways the literature...
This paper shows that perceptions of inequality matter for demand for redistribution and investigate...
What matters for individuals’ preferences for redistribution? In this paper we show that consequenti...
In this dissertation I rely on attitudinal and subjective well-being data from Transition Economies ...
This dissertation is composed of two essays. The first chapter "The Impact of Government Programs on...
This dissertation is a collection of four essays that question the behavioral assumptions of economi...
This dissertation addresses the connections between politics and economic inequality. Although the m...
This paper describes subjective wage inequality and the demand for redistribution in Austrianusing i...
This paper describes subjective wage inequality and the demand for redistribution in Austria using i...
My thesis mainly discusses the extent of redistribution in a democratic society. In poor and unequa...
The central argument advanced by the dissertation is that three key sources of variation are critica...
This dissertation focuses on the political responses to income inequality. Multiple critical puzzles...
Using survey data from a cross-section of European countries, this paper analyzes the determinants o...
We examine whether individuals' experienced levels of income inequality affect their preferences for...
"This paper explores the determinants of individual level support for income redistribution by the g...
We survey the literature on preferences for redistribution. We discuss different ways the literature...
This paper shows that perceptions of inequality matter for demand for redistribution and investigate...
What matters for individuals’ preferences for redistribution? In this paper we show that consequenti...
In this dissertation I rely on attitudinal and subjective well-being data from Transition Economies ...