Welfare state structure, inequality, and public attitudes towards progressive taxation

Author:

Berens Sarah1,Gelepithis Margarita2

Affiliation:

1. University of Cologne, Herbert-Lewin-Str. 2, Cologne, Germany

2. University of Warwick, Department of Politics and International Studies, Social Sciences Building, Coventry, UK

Abstract

Abstract Recent research indicates that while higher tax levels are politically unpopular, greater tax progressivity is not. However, there remain unanswered questions regarding public support for more progressive taxation. In particular, little is known about how individual attitudes towards tax progressivity are affected by their institutional context. Building on existing theories of redistribution, this article develops the argument that the structure of the welfare state shapes public attitudes towards progressive taxation—support for progressive taxation among both average and high-income households is undermined by ‘pro-poor’ welfare spending. We support our argument with a cross-sectional analysis of rich democracies, interacting household income with country-level indicators of welfare state structure. In doing so, we contribute a micro-level explanation for the paradoxical macro-level phenomenon that larger, more redistributive welfare states tend to be financed by less progressive tax systems.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Sociology and Political Science

Reference79 articles.

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