Political ideology and the intragenerational prospect of upward mobility
In: European Journal of Political Economy, Band 62, S. 101854
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In: European Journal of Political Economy, Band 62, S. 101854
In: Laméris , M D , Garretsen , H & Jong A Pin , R 2020 , ' Political ideology and the intragenerational prospect of upward mobility ' , European Journal of Political Economy , vol. 62 , 101854 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2020.101854 ; ISSN:0176-2680
We re-examine the effect of prospects of upward mobility (POUM) on the support for redistribution. Unlike previous studies, we analyse this relation in an intragenerational context and consider the moderating effect of political ideology through which mobility expectations affect redistributive preferences. We find that the POUM effect is conditional on political preferences. That is, we find that only for right-wing individuals expected upward income mobility negatively affects support for redistribution. Left-wing individuals prefer redistribution, regardless of expected upward income movements.
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In: European Journal of Political Economy, Band 55, S. 417-432
We examine the effect of prospects of upward mobility (POUM) on the support for redistribution in an intragenerational context. In this context, existing literature so far fails to consider the potential indirect channel via political ideology through which mobility expectations affect redistributive preferences. We address this by including an interaction between income mobility and political ideology, such that the POUM-effect is allowed to vary with political beliefs. We find a robust POUM-effect that is conditional on political preferences. Only for right-wing individuals expected upward income mobility negatively affects support for redistribution. Left-wing individuals on the other hand prefer redistribution, regardless of expected upward income movements.
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We examine the predictive validity of survey-measured left-right political ideology by testing whether this measure is able to explain observed choices regarding equality versus efficiency. We study this in a real-effort distribution experiment, in which decision-makers allocate money equally or efficiently. We distinguish between decision-makers that receive 'manna-from-heaven' and decision-makers that have earned the money to be distributed in a real effort task. We find that, conditional on entitlement concerns, self-reported right-wing ideology significantly predicts preferences for efficiency. Reported left-wing ideology does not have predictive value in explaining preferences for equality.
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In: CESifo Working Paper Series No. 6987
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In: CESifo Working Paper Series No. 7139
SSRN
In: Laméris , M D , Jong A Pin , R & Garretsen , H 2018 , ' On the measurement of voter ideology ' , European Journal of Political Economy , vol. 55 , pp. 417-432 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2018.03.003 ; ISSN:0176-2680
We propose a novel measure of voter ideology and study the (socio-economic) determinants of political beliefs. We examine the dimensionality of contemporary voter ideology using survey data of a representative sample of Dutch citizens. Using factor-analyses, we identify and validate four relevant dimensions that capture (1) preferences for economic equality, (2) preferences for markets and efficiency, (3) preferences for personal and cultural freedom, and (4) nationalist, protectionist and populist preferences. We continue with a regression analysis on the determinants of multidimensional voter ideology and compare these to the determinants of the traditional left right measure of ideology. We find that there is substantial heterogeneity in the determinants of political preferences. Moreover, using a one-dimensional left-right representation of voter ideology conceals most of this heterogeneity.
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