Affiliation:
1. University of Belgrade, Faculty of Philosophy
Abstract
The paper examines perceptions of the fairness of income distribution in
Serbia from a comparative perspective. The analysis is based on data
collected under Round 9 of the European Social Survey in 2018/2019.
Perceptions of the fairness of personal income in Serbia are compared with
those from three post- Yugoslav countries (Montenegro, Croatia and Slovenia)
and three developed capitalist countries (Germany, Sweden and the United
Kingdom). The research findings indicate that the vast majority of Serbian
citizens perceive their personal income (gross and net pay, pensions and
social benefits) as being unfairly low. From a comparative perspective, it
is noticeable that the perceived fairness of income distribution is
influenced by a contextual variable that combines the effects of economic
development, degree of income inequality and path dependency. Income from
work (gross and net pay) is more often perceived as unfairly low in the
post-Yugoslav countries of the Western Balkans (Serbia and Montenegro) than
in the post-Yugoslav countries that are members of the European Union
(Croatia and Slovenia). When it comes to perceptions of the fairness of
pensions and social benefits, the two groups of the post-Yugoslav countries
do not differ from each other. All types of income are more likely to be
perceived as unfairly low in the Western Balkan states than in the developed
capitalist countries.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
2 articles.
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