Review of Economics and Statistics, pages 1-15
Too Lucky To Be True: Fairness Views under the Shadow of Cheating
Stefania Bortolotti
1
,
Ivan Soraperra
2, 3
,
Matthias Sutter
4, 5
,
Claudia Zoller
6
5
Bonn, University of Cologne, and University of Innsbruck
6
Management Center Innsbruck
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2025-03-14
Journal:
Review of Economics and Statistics
scimago Q1
SJR: 7.553
CiteScore: 8.5
Impact factor: 7.6
ISSN: 00346535, 15309142
Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Economics and Econometrics
Abstract
Income inequalities within societies are often associated with evidence that the rich are more likely to behave unethically and evade more taxes. We study how fairness views and preferences for redistribution are affected when cheating may, but need not, be the cause of income inequalities. In our experiment, we let third parties redistribute income between a rich and a poor stakeholder. In one treatment, income inequality was due only to luck, whereas in two others rich stakeholders might have cheated. The mere suspicion of cheating changes third parties’ fairness views considerably and leads to a strong polarization that is even more pronounced when cheating generates negative externalities.
Found
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