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Impact Factor:4.390 | Ranking:Sociology 1 out of 142
Source:2014 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2015)

“Fair” Inequality? Attitudes toward Pay Differentials: The United States in Comparative Perspective

  1. Lars Osberg
  2. Timothy Smeeding
  1. Dalhousie University
  2. Syracuse University
  1. Direct correspondence to Lars Osberg, Department of Economics, Dalhousie University, 6214 University Avenue, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada (Lars.Osberg{at}dal.ca).

Abstract

Are American attitudes toward economic inequality different from those in other countries? One tradition in sociology suggests American “exceptionalism,” while another argues for convergence across nations in social norms, such as attitudes toward inequality. This article uses International Social Survey Program (ISSP) microdata to compare attitudes in different countries toward what individuals in specific occupations “do earn” and what they “should earn,” and to distinguish value preferences for more egalitarian outcomes from other confounding attitudes and perceptions. The authors suggest a method for summarizing individual preferences for the leveling of earnings and use kernel density estimates to describe and compare the distribution of individual preferences over time and cross-nationally. They find that subjective estimates of inequality in pay diverge substantially from actual data, and that although Americans do not, on the average, have different preferences for aggregate (in)equality, there is evidence for:

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