Publication | Closed Access
Unequal Societies: Income Distribution and the Social Contract
1.1K
Citations
50
References
2000
Year
Income SecurityIncome JusticeIncome DistributionWelfare EconomicsEconomic InstitutionsWestern EuropeSocial SciencesRedistributive SystemsPolitical EconomyPovertySocial InsuranceInternational RedistributionEconomic InequalitySocio-economic IssueSocial InequalityEconomicsPublic PolicyEconomic LiberalizationUnequal SocietiesPersistent InequalityEconomic PolicyPopulation InequalityPublic EconomicsSocioeconomic StructureSociologyBusinessSocial PolicyPolitical Science
This paper develops a theory of inequality and the social contract aiming to explain how countries with similar economic and political “fundamentals” can sustain such different systems of social insurance, fiscal redistribution, and education finance as those of the United States and Western Europe. With imperfect credit and insurance markets some redistributive policies can improve ex ante welfare, and this implies that their political support tends to decrease with inequality. Conversely, with credit constraints, lower redistribution translates into more persistent inequality; hence the potential for multiple steady states, with mutually reinforcing high inequality and low redistribution, or vice versa. (JEL D31, E62, P16, O41, I22)
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1