4.8 Article

Global evidence on the selfish rich inequality hypothesis

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2109690119

Keywords

selfishness; inequality; redistribution

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence Scheme, FAIR Project [262675, 236995, 250415]

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The study shows a global belief that the rich are richer because they have been more selfish, with stronger beliefs in countries with higher corruption and weaker institutions and weaker beliefs among higher income individuals. This belief is also predictive of people's policy views on inequality and redistribution, with those who believe in selfish rich inequality more likely to support policies aimed at reducing inequality.
We report on a study of whether people believe that the rich are richer than the poor because they have been more selfish in life, using data from more than 26,000 individuals in 60 countries. The findings show a strong belief in the selfish rich inequality hypothesis at the global level; in the majority of countries, the mode is to strongly agree with it. However, we also identify important between- and within-country variation. We find that the belief in selfish rich inequality is much stronger in countries with extensive corruption and weak institutions and less strong among people who are higher in the income distribution in their society. Finally, we show that the belief in selfish rich inequality is predictive of people's policy views on inequality and redistribution: It is significantly positively associated with agreeing that inequality in their country is unfair, and it is significantly positively associated with agreeing that the government should aim to reduce inequality. These relationships are highly significant both across and within countries and robust to including country-level or individual-level controls and using Lasso-selected regressors. Thus, the data provide compelling evidence of people believing that the rich are richer because they have been more selfish in life and perceiving selfish behavior as creating unfair inequality and justifying equalizing policies.

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