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  How Much Do Citizens Care About Ethnic Wealth Gaps? Inequality and Support for Financial Market Stabilization in Times of Crisis

Bremer, B., Chwieroth, J., & Walter, A. (2024). How Much Do Citizens Care About Ethnic Wealth Gaps? Inequality and Support for Financial Market Stabilization in Times of Crisis. SocArXiv. doi:10.31235/osf.io/r75zh.

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Full text via SocArXiv
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https://osf.io/u24nf/ (Supplementary material)
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What Explains Support for Wealth Protection Policies? Ethnicity, Class, and Inequality: supplemental materials
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 Creators:
Bremer, Björn1, 2, Author                 
Chwieroth, Jeffrey3, Author
Walter, Andrew4, Author
Affiliations:
1Politische Ökonomie, MPI for the Study of Societies, Max Planck Society, ou_3363015              
2Department of Political Science, Central European University, Vienna, Austria, ou_persistent22              
3Department of International Relations, London School of Economics, UK, ou_persistent22              
4School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne, Australia, ou_persistent22              

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Free keywords: ethnic wealth gaps, financial crises, multi-ethnic societies, stabilization policies, survey experiments, wealth inequalty
 Abstract: People value household wealth as a source of private insurance, investment, and social status, which is reflected in their policy preferences. These preferences encourage governments to stabilize financial markets and protect private wealth during major economic crises. However, such policies often exacerbate wealth inequality, including between dominant and subordinate ethnic groups. We explore how citizens evaluate this trade-off by using information treatment and conjoint survey experiments in Australia and the UK in the wake of the COVID crisis. We find that information on ethnic wealth disparities has little, if any, effect on financial stabilization policy preferences, whereas information on ethnicity-neutral wealth inequality reduces support for such stabilization. Additionally, the conjoint experiment reveals greater acceptance of targeted interventions that reduce general wealth disparities than of targeted interventions to alleviate ethnic inequality. Our findings reveal a critical political economy constraint on contemporary policy efforts to address enduring inequities in multiethnic societies.

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Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2024-07-05
 Publication Status: Published online
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 Identifiers: DOI: 10.31235/osf.io/r75zh
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Title: SocArXiv
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