Why do voters at the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum support political candidates who generally disfavor redistributive policies? Existing explanations often presume that voters are explicitly acting in opposition to their economic self-interest, or that they hold persistently optimistic expectations regarding the probability of moving into the upper ranks of the income distribution. This paper provides an alternative economic explanation. When voters evaluate their well-being by making relative utility comparisons, support for redistribution depends not only on absolute income but on one's status relative to a reference group. When reference groups are defined geographically, support depends on exposure to higher-income neighbors. ...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
There is a large literature demonstrating that positive economic conditions increase support for inc...
Why are governments elected by proportional representation more prone to redistribute income than th...
In 2000, the county-level correlation between median income and the share of voters favoring Democra...
As economic inequality grows, more people stand to benefit from wealth redistribution. Yet in many c...
I propose a framework in which individual political participation can take two distinct forms, votin...
Traditionally, we have assumed that voters choose the candidates and policy platforms that benefit t...
It has long been argued that growing inequality would lead to growing demands for redistribution, es...
This dissertation focuses on the political responses to income inequality. Multiple critical puzzles...
The analyses presented are meaningful only if it is accepted that such beneficial income disparities...
This paper argues that income received via redistributive transfers, unlike labor income, requires n...
In mainstream economics individuals are supposed driven only by their self interest. By contrast, in...
The median voter hypothesis is important to endogenous growth theories because it provides the polit...
학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 사회과학대학 정치외교학부(외교학전공), 2018. 8. 박종희.Why does support for redistribution remai...
This paper reports results from a laboratory experiment that investigates the Meltzer–Richard model...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
There is a large literature demonstrating that positive economic conditions increase support for inc...
Why are governments elected by proportional representation more prone to redistribute income than th...
In 2000, the county-level correlation between median income and the share of voters favoring Democra...
As economic inequality grows, more people stand to benefit from wealth redistribution. Yet in many c...
I propose a framework in which individual political participation can take two distinct forms, votin...
Traditionally, we have assumed that voters choose the candidates and policy platforms that benefit t...
It has long been argued that growing inequality would lead to growing demands for redistribution, es...
This dissertation focuses on the political responses to income inequality. Multiple critical puzzles...
The analyses presented are meaningful only if it is accepted that such beneficial income disparities...
This paper argues that income received via redistributive transfers, unlike labor income, requires n...
In mainstream economics individuals are supposed driven only by their self interest. By contrast, in...
The median voter hypothesis is important to endogenous growth theories because it provides the polit...
학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 사회과학대학 정치외교학부(외교학전공), 2018. 8. 박종희.Why does support for redistribution remai...
This paper reports results from a laboratory experiment that investigates the Meltzer–Richard model...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
There is a large literature demonstrating that positive economic conditions increase support for inc...
Why are governments elected by proportional representation more prone to redistribute income than th...