Social Positions and Fairness Views on Inequality
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Series
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Speaker(s)Kristoffer B. Hvidberg (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
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FieldBehavioral Economics
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LocationUniversity of Amsterdam, B 3.08
Amsterdam -
Date and time
October 13, 2022
15:30 - 16:45
Please notice change of starting time.
Abstract
We link survey data on Danish people's perceived income
positions and fairness views on inequality within various reference
groups to administrative records on their reference groups, income
histories, and life events. People are, on average, well-informed about
the income levels of their reference groups. Yet, lower-ranked
respondents in all groups tend to overestimate their own position among
others because they believe others' incomes are lower than is the case,
while the opposite holds for higher-ranked respondents. Misperceptions
of positions in reference groups relate to proximity to other
individuals, transparency norms, and visible signals of income. People
view inequalities within their co-workers and education groups as
significantly more unfair than overall inequality, yet underestimate
inequality the most exactly within these groups. Views on the fairness
of inequalities are strongly correlated with an individual's current
position, move with shocks like unemployment or promotions, and change
when experimentally showing people their actual positions. However, the
higher perceived unfairness of income differences within co-workers and
education groups stays unchanged. The theoretical framework shows that
this can have important implications for redistribution policy.Joint paper with Claus Kreiner and Stefanie Stantcheva. Link to paper: https://www.nber.org/papers/w28099