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How do people’s acquaintances shape their support for economic redistribution and social protection?

Miranda J. Lubbers, COALESCE Lab, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Michał Bojanowski, COALESCE Lab, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona & Kozminski University
Project selected in the Social Research Call 2019

While people’s intimate relationships are vital for their wellbeing, our understanding of their influence on our lives is relatively limited. According to a hypothesis proposed by social researchers, exposing individuals to the living conditions of other social groups could increase their empathy and solidarity with those groups and thus affect their political opinions. This research aims to test this hypothesis by focusing on individuals’ support for economic redistribution and social protection schemes in a survey carried out in Spain in 2021. Contrary to expectations, respondents whose acquaintances had, on average, low-paid jobs or were more often unemployed favoured redistribution and social protection less than those whose acquaintances had high-paid jobs, irrespective of their own household incomes. Thus, rather than creating empathy, acquaintances can strengthen beliefs that others do not deserve protection.
Key points
  • 1
       Each individual has a unique interpersonal environment, as well as a diverse number of acquaintances who, in turn, have different occupations and occupational statuses.
  • 2
       People with high household incomes tend to have acquaintances who hold higher-income jobs.
  • 3
       No differences are observed in the level of support for redistribution and social protection among respondents with high household incomes, regardless of whether they have more acquaintances with low-earnings jobs or more acquaintances with high-income jobs.
  • 4
       Respondents with low household incomes, whose acquaintances have low-earnings jobs, are also less supportive of social protection schemes than respondents with low household incomes whose acquaintances have middle-income jobs.
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