artículo
Economic and cultural determinants of elite attitudes towards redistribution
Autor
López Martínez, Matías
Moraes Silva, Graziella
Teeger, Chana
Marques, Pedro
Institución
Resumen
Previous studies posit that elites are willing to advance the redistribution of income and social
goods when negative effects of inequality, such as crime and conflict, threaten their own safety.
Nonetheless, elites’ willingness to tackle inequality seems to be low throughout the Global South
in spite of such extreme negative consequences. Drawing on 56 in-depth interviews and
closed-ended surveys with 543 political and economic elites, we document how elites’
perceptions of the poor mediate their response to threats resulting from inequality. In-depth
interview data reveal that, in explaining the challenges of redistribution policies, respondents
consistently characterize the poor as ignorant, uninformed, and irrational, in opposition to
rational, maximizing elites. We theorize that these perceptions of the poor hinder elites’
willingness to support redistribution, even when redistribution suits protection needs. We test
this relationship in random samples of elites in Brazil, South Africa, and Uruguay and find it to
be robust.Previous studies posit that elites are willing to advance the redistribution of income and social
goods when negative effects of inequality, such as crime and conflict, threaten their own safety.
Nonetheless, elites’ willingness to tackle inequality seems to be low throughout the Global South
in spite of such extreme negative consequences. Drawing on 56 in-depth interviews and
closed-ended surveys with 543 political and economic elites, we document how elites’
perceptions of the poor mediate their response to threats resulting from inequality. In-depth
interview data reveal that, in explaining the challenges of redistribution policies, respondents
consistently characterize the poor as ignorant, uninformed, and irrational, in opposition to
rational, maximizing elites. We theorize that these perceptions of the poor hinder elites’
willingness to support redistribution, even when redistribution suits protection needs. We test
this relationship in random samples of elites in Brazil, South Africa, and Uruguay and find it to
be robust.Previous studies posit that elites are willing to advance the redistribution of income and social
goods when negative effects of inequality, such as crime and conflict, threaten their own safety.
Nonetheless, elites’ willingness to tackle inequality seems to be low throughout the Global South
in spite of such extreme negative consequences. Drawing on 56 in-depth interviews and
closed-ended surveys with 543 political and economic elites, we document how elites’
perceptions of the poor mediate their response to threats resulting from inequality. In-depth
interview data reveal that, in explaining the challenges of redistribution policies, respondents
consistently characterize the poor as ignorant, uninformed, and irrational, in opposition to
rational, maximizing elites. We theorize that these perceptions of the poor hinder elites’
willingness to support redistribution, even when redistribution suits protection needs. We test
this relationship in random samples of elites in Brazil, South Africa, and Uruguay and find it to
be robust.