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European Union Politics
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Attitudes toward Eliminating Income Inequality in Europe

Karl Kaltenthaler

University of Akron, USA, kck{at}uakron.edu

Stephen Ceccoli

Rhodes College, USA, ceccoli{at}rhodes.edu

Ronald Gelleny

University of Akron, USA, Gelleny{at}uakron.edu

In this paper, we seek to understand why attitudes vary among individuals regarding the issue of income distribution in European Union member states. We believe that the issue of income inequality is a potentially significant political cleavage that may have an important influence in meaningful ways in European politics. Rather than focusing on the national context to explain variation in citizen attitudes toward income inequality, we control for national context and explore the relative influence of various individual-level characteristics in shaping how Europeans think about the distribution of income in their countries. We assess how individuals' political attitude, economic self-interest, and general attitude toward society affect how they think about income equality in their own society. To test these propositions, we devise a series of hypotheses that are tested in an ordered probit model using data from the 2000—1 wave of the World Values and European Values Surveys. It is our contention that the way people think about income inequality in their society is largely a product of the ideas that they hold about politics and society, and not principally a product of their economic self-interest.

Key Words: income inequality • political economy • probit model • public opinion • World Values Survey

European Union Politics, Vol. 9, No. 2, 217-241 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1465116508089086


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