‘The Economy is Rigged’: Inequality Narratives, Fairness, and Support for Redistribution in Six Countries

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Abstract

Do narratives about the causes of inequality influence support for redistribution? Scholarship suggests that information about levels of inequality does not easily shift redistributive attitudes. We embed information about inequality within a commentary article depicting the economy as being rigged to advantage elites, a common populist narrative of both the left and right. Drawing on the media effects and political economy literature, we expect articles employing narratives that portray inequality as the consequence of systemic unfairness to increase demands for redistribution. We test this proposition via an online survey experiment with 7426 respondents in Australia, France, Germany, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Our narrative treatment significantly increases attitudes favoring redistribution in five of the countries. In the US the treatment has no effect. We consider several reasons for the non-result in the US – highlighting beliefs about government inefficiency – and conclude by discussing general implications of our findings.

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APA

Culpepper, P. D., Shandler, R., Jung, J. H., & Lee, T. (2024). ‘The Economy is Rigged’: Inequality Narratives, Fairness, and Support for Redistribution in Six Countries. Comparative Political Studies. https://doi.org/10.1177/00104140241252072

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