articleAmerican Economic ReviewMar 27, 2015Closed access

How Elastic Are Preferences for Redistribution? Evidence from Randomized Survey Experiments

Princeton University · Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center · +2 more institutions

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Abstract

We analyze randomized online survey experiments providing interactive, customized information on US income inequality, the link between top income tax rates and economic growth, and the estate tax. The treatment has large effects on views about inequality but only slightly moves tax and transfer policy preferences. An exception is the estate tax—informing respondents of the small share of decedents who pay it doubles support for it. The small effects for all other policies can be partially explained by respondents' low trust in government and a disconnect between concerns about social issues and the public policies meant to address them. (JEL D31, D72, H23, H24)

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Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Economics
  • Redistribution (election)
  • Estate
  • Economic inequality
  • Public economics
  • Inequality
  • Estate tax
  • Government (linguistics)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
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