Anna-Maria Kanzola, Konstantina Papaioannou, Demosthenes G. Kollias, Panagiotis E. Petrakis
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State’s Role in Income Inequality: Social Preferences and Life Satisfaction
This study analyzes the determinants of life satisfaction in two social identity profiles according to whether the individual favors or is against state intervention for reducing income inequality. The data originated from field research conducted in the Greek society during the years 2019, 2020, and 2022. Our findings suggest that individuals who are against state intervention to reduce income inequality are closer to the utilitarian view of life assessment. Their life satisfaction is shaped by happiness, the ability to borrow money, and the negative impact of social distrust. Alternatively, individuals favoring state intervention to reduce income inequality have a sophisticated background of traits, social values, and exogenous characteristics influencing their life satisfaction, such as happiness, religiosity, equitability, cultural change, the ability to borrow money, and state of health. Thus, microeconomic attitudes decisively establish macroeconomic policies through financial decisions and expectations about a resilient state’s obligations to its citizens. In this context, policy remarks suggest that state intervention promotes life satisfaction when it does not restrict individual freedom and well-being. The study’s novelty lies in providing a concise behavioral framework, without abandoning economic analysis, for the assessment of social preferences for economic organization and life satisfaction, which is at the center of efficient policymaking aimed to improve social welfare.
期刊介绍:
International Advances in Economic Research (IAER) was established to promote the dissemination of economic and financial research within the international community. Founded in 1995 by the International Atlantic Economic Society, a need was identified to provide the latest research on today''s economic policies and tomorrow''s economic and financial conditions. Economists can no longer be concerned with professional developments only in their home country. Research by scholars in one country can easily have implications for other countries, yet often vital results are not shared. Economic restructuring in a shrinking world demands close analysis and careful interpretation. In IAER, authors from around the globe look at these issues, coming together in the cross-fertilization of multinational ideas. The journal provides economists, financial specialists, and scholars in related disciplines with much-needed opportunities to share their insights with worldwide colleagues. Policy-oriented, empirical, and theoretical research papers in all economic and financial areas are welcome, without regard to methodological preferences or school of thought. All manuscripts are submitted to a double-blind, peer review process.
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Officially cited as: Int Adv Econ Res