2019
DOI: 10.1002/soej.12416
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Fairness and the Unselfish Demand for Redistribution by Taxpayers and Welfare Recipients

Abstract: We illustrate how the desire to live in a fair society that rewards individual effort and hard work triggers an unselfish though rational demand for redistribution. This leads the well off to prefer higher taxes and the poor to reject extreme progressivity. We then provide evidence of these behaviors using a nationally representative survey from Italy. Our empirical analysis confirms that a stronger aversion to unfair distributive outcomes is associated with a higher support for redistribution by individuals w… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
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“…We clarify this role and add to the literature by showing the compliance implications of biased information about government action and public finance issues. More in general, our findings improve the understanding of the psychological and social drivers of compliance, also including peer effects , cultural traits , trust in institutions (McKee et al, 2018; van Dijke & Verboon, 2010), social norms (Abraham et al, 2017;Becchetti et al, 2017;Lefebvre et al, 2015), corruption (Alm et al, 2016;Rotondi & Stanca, 2015), fairness concerns (Alesina & Angeletos, 2005;Gualtieri et al, 2019;Sabatini et al, 2020), and intrinsic motivations (Calvet Christian & Alm, 2014;Cerqueti et al, 2019;Dwenger et al, 2016;Luttmer & Singhal, 2011.…”
supporting
confidence: 52%
“…We clarify this role and add to the literature by showing the compliance implications of biased information about government action and public finance issues. More in general, our findings improve the understanding of the psychological and social drivers of compliance, also including peer effects , cultural traits , trust in institutions (McKee et al, 2018; van Dijke & Verboon, 2010), social norms (Abraham et al, 2017;Becchetti et al, 2017;Lefebvre et al, 2015), corruption (Alm et al, 2016;Rotondi & Stanca, 2015), fairness concerns (Alesina & Angeletos, 2005;Gualtieri et al, 2019;Sabatini et al, 2020), and intrinsic motivations (Calvet Christian & Alm, 2014;Cerqueti et al, 2019;Dwenger et al, 2016;Luttmer & Singhal, 2011.…”
supporting
confidence: 52%
“…We can see the information order's inefficient placement at the expense of budget funds in ratings of TV channels composed by TNS Central Asia. Such inefficiency manifests itself in many aspects, including the social block of expenditures in various countries' budgets (Sabatini, Ventura, Yamamura, & Zamparelli, 2017;Makreshanska-Mladenovska & Petrevski, 2017;Watanabe, Miyake & Yasuoka, 2018). The data on audience reach and the daily average of TV channels (Table 2- As mentioned above, the data show that the following TV channels are the most popular among the population: Channel 1 Eurasia, AstanaTV, 31 Channel, and KTK.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Determining net fiscal effects of migration is a serious challenge. It depends on real and potential income of migrants, as well as specific factors, such as the structure of the tax system, social assistance and entrepreneurship support (IMF, 2015;Litau, 2017;Sabatini et al, 2017;Watanabe, Miyake & Yasuoka, 2018). Empirical studies on the average net effects of migrants in developed countries on the fiscal balance show that it is positive (OECD, 2013).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%