How does exposure to COVID-19 influence health and income inequality aversion?

IF 0.5 4区 经济学 Q4 ECONOMICS Social Choice and Welfare Pub Date : 2023-05-19 DOI:10.1007/s00355-023-01460-8
Miqdad Asaria, Joan Costa-Font, Frank Cowell
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

We study individual aversion to health and income inequality in three European countries (the United Kingdom, Germany, and Italy), its determinants and especially, the effects of exposure to three types of COVID-19 specific shocks affecting individuals' employment status, their income and health. Next, using evidence of representative samples of the population in the UK, we compare levels of health- and income-inequality aversion in the UK between the years 2016 and 2020. We document evidence of a significant increase in inequality aversion in both income and health domains. However, we show that inequality aversion is higher in the income domain than in the health domain. Furthermore, we find that inequality aversion in both domains increases in age and education and decreases in income and risk appetite. However, people directly exposed to major health shocks during the COVID-19 pandemic generally exhibited lower levels of aversion to both income and health inequality. Finally, we show that inequality aversion was significantly higher among those exposed to higher risk of COVID-19 mortality who experienced major health shocks during the pandemic.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00355-023-01460-8.

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接触新冠肺炎如何影响健康和对收入不平等的厌恶?
我们研究了三个欧洲国家(英国、德国和意大利)的个人对健康和收入不平等的厌恶及其决定因素,尤其是暴露于三种类型的新冠肺炎特定冲击对个人就业状况、收入和健康的影响。接下来,利用英国人口代表性样本的证据,我们比较了2016年至2020年间英国对健康和收入不平等的厌恶程度。我们记录了收入和健康领域对不平等厌恶情绪显著增加的证据。然而,我们发现,收入领域的不平等厌恶情绪高于健康领域。此外,我们发现,这两个领域对不平等的厌恶在年龄和教育方面都有所增加,在收入和风险偏好方面也有所下降。然而,在新冠肺炎大流行期间,直接受到重大健康冲击的人通常对收入和健康不平等的厌恶程度较低。最后,我们发现,在新冠肺炎死亡风险较高的人群中,在大流行期间经历了重大健康冲击的人对不平等的厌恶程度明显更高。补充信息:在线版本包含补充材料,可访问10.1007/s00355-023-01460-8。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: Social Choice and Welfare explores all aspects, both normative and positive, of welfare economics, collective choice, and strategic interaction. Topics include but are not limited to: preference aggregation, welfare criteria, fairness, justice and equity, rights, inequality and poverty measurement, voting and elections, political games, coalition formation, public goods, mechanism design, networks, matching, optimal taxation, cost-benefit analysis, computational social choice, judgement aggregation, market design, behavioral welfare economics, subjective well-being studies and experimental investigations related to social choice and voting. As such, the journal is inter-disciplinary and cuts across the boundaries of economics, political science, philosophy, and mathematics. Articles on choice and order theory that include results that can be applied to the above topics are also included in the journal. While it emphasizes theory, the journal also publishes empirical work in the subject area reflecting cross-fertilizing between theoretical and empirical research. Readers will find original research articles, surveys, and book reviews.Officially cited as: Soc Choice Welf
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