The beliefs someone holds and the environment where they live and work shape how much economic inequality people report seeing, according to new research from the University at Buffalo School of Management.
Two studies—one in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology and another in Nature Communications—reveal that individuals who believe in the fairness of socioeconomic institutions and those living or working in geographical areas where rich and poor are separated from each other perceive less economic inequality than those who question institutional fairness or are exposed to mixed-income spaces.
“Even when we expose people to identical levels of income inequality in controlled environments, their personal beliefs or the geographical separation between the rich and the poor consistently shape how much inequality people report seeing,” says Daniela Goya-Tocchetto, Ph.D., assistant professor of organization and human resources in the UB School of Management, who co-authored both studies.
To understand what motivates people to see inequality and be concerned about it, researchers conducted eight surveys of more than 4,000 participants to examine the factors that shape attitudes towards unequal distribution of wealth.
In a separate study, researchers analyzed more than two decades of data regarding attitudes toward inequality and surveyed more than 2,000 participants to understand how economic segregation shapes how much economic inequality people see.
Despite growing disparities in income, public opinion often underestimates the level of economic inequality in society. This new research suggests that this underestimation may be in part due to people’s personal beliefs and how close they live to people of different socioeconomic status.
Importantly, the findings also reveal that the extent to which people care about addressing inequality depends on the extent to which they see the inequality in the first place.
When people believe the system is fair, for example, they perceive income gaps as smaller, leading to lower support for policies such as tax reforms, health care provisions, minimum wage increases and caps on executive pay.
When people live and work in highly segregated areas, they see less economic inequality, leading to more positive attitudes towards inequality and decreased support for government policies that aim to address it.
“The findings are a reminder that confronting inequality is not just about changing policy, it requires addressing the psychological lens through which people see the world,” says Goya-Tocchetto.
More information:
Daniela Goya-Tocchetto et al, System justification makes income gaps appear smaller, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.jesp.2024.104646
Shai Davidai et al, Economic segregation is associated with reduced concerns about economic inequality, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-49778-w
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New studies reveal two factors that mask economic inequality (2024, November 1)
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