Context and Preference Formation: The Social and Political Origins of Support for Redistribution
Abstract
When do individuals feel that economic inequality needs to be corrected through redistributive government policy, such as progressive taxes or social spending? Using a cross-national data set of public opinion across both developing and developed countries, this dissertation finds that political context plays a key role in determining how individuals view economic inequality and their support for redistributive social policy. An overarching theme throughout the dissertation is that political elites are key in making inequality a prominent issue for the public. This is done by framing individual attributes such as income, ethnic identity or geographic local (urban vs. rural) in a way that will either maximize or minimize support for redistribution. When political elites lack incentives to mobilize public opinion on the issue, it becomes unlikely that individual attributes such as income or ethnicity will predict support for redistribution.
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Freeze, Kent (2012). Context and Preference Formation: The Social and Political Origins of Support for Redistribution. Dissertation, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/5790.
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