articleAmerican Political Science ReviewApr 28, 2009Closed access

A Model of Social Identity with an Application to Political Economy: Nation, Class, and Redistribution

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Abstract

This article develops a model for analyzing social identity and applies it to the political economy of income redistribution, focusing on class and national identities. The model attempts to distill major findings in social psychology into a parsimonious statement of what it means to identify with a group and what factors determine the groups with whom people identify. It then proposes an equilibrium concept where both identities and behavior are endogenously determined. Applying this model to redistribution helps explain three empirical patterns in modern democracies. First, national identification is more common among the poor than among the rich. Second, national identification tends to reduce support for…

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952
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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Redistribution (election)
  • Redistribution of income and wealth
  • Politics
  • Social identity theory
  • Social class
  • National identity
  • Political economy
  • Inequality
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
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