Journal

Reforms and Redistribution: Disentangling the Egoistic and Sociotropic Origins of Voter Preferences

Michael M. Bechtel, Roman Liesch

Public Opinion Quarterly, 2020

Abstract

The economic effects of policy options help explain why individuals support some reforms while they oppose others. However, disentangling the egoistic and sociotropic origins of voter preferences has proven difficult. We conduct an experiment that details how a reform affects one’s personal income, the average income in the country, and different income groups. The results suggest that the causal effect of personal income changes on reform support is about twice the size of changes in a country''s income average. Voters specifically care about how reforms impact the poor and this pro-social concern does neither depend on their own income level nor on how a policy will affect them personally. We find that these patterns characterize how voters evaluate the redistributive effects of generic economic policies, health care reforms, trade policy decisions, and the policy platforms of candidates running for office.

Resources

Topics
Public OpinionSurvey ExperimentsPolitical Economy

Cite

Michael M. Bechtel, Roman Liesch (2020). Reforms and Redistribution: Disentangling the Egoistic and Sociotropic Origins of Voter Preferences. Public Opinion Quarterly.

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