Perceived Economic Inequality Measures: Their Reflection on Objective Inequalities and Their Effects on Support for Redistribution

Journal Article
Authors

Juan Diego Garcia-Castro

Efrain Garcia-Sanchez

Guillermo B. Willis

Juan-Carlos Castillo

Rosa Rodriguez-Bailon

Published

December 1, 2022

Abstract
Perceptions of economic inequality (PEI) play a central role in people’s responses to inequality. We aim to examine the consistency between different PEI measures (income gaps, diagrammatic figures, experienced downward and upward disparities), their relationship with objective inequality, and their association with redistributive preferences. Using data from the International Social Survey Programme 2019 (N = 34,387, 22 countries), we performed multilevel regression analyses and found that PEI indicators were weakly and positively correlated, suggesting that they represent different dimensions of the same construct. Furthermore, objective inequality was not related to PEI measures. Finally, all PEI measures were positively associated with support for redistribution, except for experienced upward inequality. We discuss the multidimensional nature of PEI and its implications on redistributive preferences.

How to cite this work

Juan Diego Garcia-Castro, Efrain Garcia-Sanchez, Guillermo B. Willis, Juan-Carlos Castillo, Rosa Rodriguez-Bailon (2022). Perceived Economic Inequality Measures: Their Reflection on Objective Inequalities and Their Effects on Support for Redistribution. Social Psychology, 53 https://doi.org/https://econtent.hogrefe.com/doi/10.1027/1864-9335/a000498