American’s desire for less wealth inequality does not depend on how you ask them

Journal Title: Judgment and Decision Making - Year 2013, Vol 8, Issue 3

Abstract

A large body of survey research offers evidence that citizens are not always fully aware of the economic and political realities in their respective countries. Norton and Ariely (2011) extended this research to the domain of wealth inequality, showing that Americans were surprisingly unaware of the shape of the wealth distribution in America. Using an alternative methodology, Eriksson and Simpson (2012) found that asking Americans to estimate the average wealth of quintiles, rather than the percent of wealth owned by each quintile, led to relatively more accurate estimates. We note, however, that the Eriksson and Simpson (2012) results do not challenge Norton and Ariely’s (2011) conclusion that Americans desire a much more equal distribution of wealth.

Authors and Affiliations

Michael I. Norton and Dan Ariely

Keywords

Related Articles

The Sharing Game: Fairness in resource allocation as a function of incentive, gender, and recipient types

Economic games involving allocation of resources have been a useful tool for the study of decision making for both psychologists and economists. In two experiments involving a repeated-trials game over twenty opportuniti...

Affective reactions and context-dependent processing of negations

Three experiments demonstrate how the processing of negations is contingent on the evaluation context in which the negative information is presented. In addition, the strategy used to process the negations induced differ...

Hedonic “adaptation”: Specific habituation to disgust/death elicitors as a result of dissecting a cadaver

People live in a world in which they are surrounded by potential disgust elicitors such as “used” chairs, air, silverware, and money as well as excretory activities. People function in this world by ignoring most of thes...

Incentives in religious performance: a stochastic dominance approach

Using a stochastic dominance approach in an international dataset of about 10,000 Catholic subjects, we show that incentives (based on absolute belief) play a crucial role in religious practice (church attendance and pra...

Risk communication with pictographs: The role of numeracy and graph processing

We conducted three studies to investigate how well pictographs communicate medical screening information to persons with higher and lower numeracy skills. In Study 1, we conducted a 2 (probability level: higher vs. lower...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP678067
  • DOI -
  • Views 118
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Michael I. Norton and Dan Ariely (2013). American’s desire for less wealth inequality does not depend on how you ask them. Judgment and Decision Making, 8(3), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-678067