Author:
Chanel Olivier,Paul Pavitra
Abstract
AbstractRedistributive justice is based on the premise that it is unfair for people to be better or worse off relative to others simply because of their fortune or misfortune. It assumes equal opportunities arising from four factors: social circumstances, effort, option luck and brute luck. This paper seeks to investigate how differences in perceived brute luck influence individual preferences for redistribution in favour of two public policies: “health intervention” and “environmental actions”. These policies are viewed somewhat differently: the environment is considered a pure “public good” and health, more as a “private good” with a strong public good element. Consequently, potential self-serving biases inherent in the preferences for redistributive policies are expected to differ, more likely favouring health than the environment. The perceived degree of brute luck may capture such a difference—those perceiving themselves as luckiest should be less amenable to redistribution in favour of health than the unluckiest. Data from the three waves (2000, 2006 and 2008) of a French population survey are used to examine this self-serving bias. A Generalised Ordered Logit (GOL) model is found to be statistically more relevant compared to other logistic regression models (multinomial and ordered). We find that a perceived low degree of brute luck is significantly associated with a decreased preference of redistributive environmental policies but the reverse is true for redistributive health policies, i.e., association with an increased preference. Assuming that all inequalities due to differing luck are unjust, this empirical validation gives redistributive justice grounds for equalisation policies regarding health.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,General Psychology,General Social Sciences,General Arts and Humanities,General Business, Management and Accounting
Reference31 articles.
1. Ami D, Aprahamian F, Chanel O, Luchini S (2011) A test of cheap talk in different hypothetical contexts: the case of air pollution. Environ Resour Econ 50(1):111–130
2. Atkinson AB, Rainwater L, Smeeding TM (1995) Income distribution in OECD countries, evidence from theLuxembourg income study. In: Volume 18 of OECD Social Policy Studies. Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris, France
3. Bai J, Xu B X, Yang S L, Guo Y Y (2022) Why are higher-class individuals less supportive of redistribution? The mediating role of attributions for rich-poor gap. Current Psychol 290:1–11
4. Biel A, Thøgersen J (2007) Activation of social norms in social dilemmas: a review of the evidence and reflections on the implications for environmental behaviour. J Econ Psychol 28:93–112
5. Brant R (1990) Assessing proportionality in the proportional odds model for ordinal logistic regression. Biometrics 46:1171–1178