The Polarization of Inequality Perceptions in the New Gilded Age

Hannah Waight Smiles at the camera

Hannah Waight, an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology, has a new co-authored article published in the American Journal of Sociology, titled "The Polarization of Inequality Perceptions in the New Gilded Age."

The article states that a growing social science literature finds that Americans tend to underestimate levels of socio-economic inequality. However, this work has not considered the historical evolution of distributional perceptions in an era of rising economic polarization. The authors of the paper draw on historical public opinion data from 1966-2013 to explain the shifting bases of inequality perceptions. Trends in perceptions of economic polarization are inversely correlated with trends in actual distributional inequality, with a surprising decline in the share of Americans who perceive inequality to be growing during the 1990s and early 2000s. Regression and simulation analyses demonstrate how this decline was asymmetrically concentrated among identified Republicans. Patterns of inequality perceptions reflect a growing class divide within the Republican party. It is this intersection, rather than self-reinforcing meritocratic myths or differential local exposure to real inequality, that explains the counterintuitive decline of perceived economic polarization during the 1990s and 2000s.

Waight's work was also recently featured in Oregon News.

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