Working Paper

Global Evidence on Misperceptions and Preferences for Redistribution

Jennifer Elena Feichtmayer, Klaus Gründler
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 9381

Individuals often hold erroneous beliefs about their socio-economic status relative to others. We develop a new machine learning technique to measure these misperceptions and use large-scale international survey data to compute status misperception for 241,757 households from 97 countries (24 OECD, 73 non-OECD). We show that status misperception is a widespread phenomenon across the globe. Upward-biased perceptions are associated with lower preferences for redistribution and have direct consequences for welfare provision via the tax and transfer system. The effect accounts for approximately 9% of the variation in redistribution preferences, is independent of socio-demographic characteristics, robust to measurement errors in social surveys, and occurs similary when we change the underlying micro data or examine party preferences.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Social Protection
Keywords: misperceptions, machine learning, socio-economic status, preferences, redistribution, welfare provision, taxes and transfers
JEL Classification: D310, H530, I300, C430