Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/9918
Título
When and How Information About Economic Inequality Affects Attitudes Towards Redistribution
Autor
Publicado en
Social Justice Research
Editorial
Springer
Fecha de publicación
2024-06
ISSN
0885-7466
DOI
10.1007/s11211-024-00435-z
Resumo
Perceived economic inequality is positively associated with public support for policies to reduce it. However, providing information about economic inequality does
not necessarily motivate people to support redistributive policies. This inconsistency may be due to how people interpret the information about inequality. We
argue that the interpretation of information about inequality difers between individuals as a function of the characteristics of the source and people’s ideologies.
We conducted two experiments using an exploratory (N=239) and confrmatory
(N=707) strategy. We found that attitudes toward redistribution increased when a
seemingly neutral international institution (as opposed to a left-wing political party)
provided information about economic inequality due to the credibility attributed to
the source—but not due to power and familiarity. Moreover, the efect of providing information about inequality on support for redistribution (via source credibility)
depended on people’s ideologies: it was positive and statistically signifcant for people who held more (vs. less) system-justifying beliefs. These fndings contribute to
understanding the interplay between social psychological processes, communication
strategies, and attitudes toward redistribution.
Palabras clave
Economic inequality
Political ideology
Elaboration likelihood model
System justification
Materia
Sociología
Sociology
Versión del editor
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