Fairness views and political preferences

evidence from a large and heterogeneous sample

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Daniel Müller (Ludwig Maximilians University)

S. Renes ( Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00355-020-01289-5
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
4
Volume number
56
Pages (from-to)
679-711

Abstract

We elicit distributional fairness ideals of impartial spectators using an incentivized experiment in a large and heterogeneous sample of the German population. We document several empirical facts: (i) egalitarianism is more popular than efficiency- and maxi-min ideals; (ii) females are more egalitarian than men; (iii) men are relatively more efficiency minded; (iv) left-leaning voters are more likely to be egalitarians, whereas right-leaning voters are more likely to be efficiency-minded; and (v) young and high-educated participants hold different fairness ideals than the rest of the population. Moreover, we show that fairness ideals predict preferences for redistribution and intervention by the government, as well as actual charitable giving, even after controlling for a range of covariates. This paper thus contributes to our understanding of the underpinnings of voting behavior and ideological preferences and to the literature that links laboratory measures and field behavior.

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