Populists argue for redistribution from an elite to "ordinary people". The present paper asks if populist administrations actually achieve redistribution. Combining new data on populism in Latin America and the Caribbean with information on income and consumption inequality since 1970, we find no evidence that populists effectively redistributive.
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
Populism and Inequality: Does Reality Match the Populist Rhetoric?
Journal Article
Reference
Štrobl, Martin, Andrea Sáenz de Viteri, Martin Rode and Christian Bjørnskov (2023). “Populism and Inequality: Does Reality Match the Populist Rhetoric?”. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 107, 1–17. doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2023.01.010
Štrobl, Martin, Andrea Sáenz de Viteri, Martin Rode and Christian Bjørnskov (2023). “Populism and Inequality: Does Reality Match the Populist Rhetoric?”. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 107, 1–17. doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2023.01.010
Authors
Martin Štrobl,
Andrea Sáenz de Viteri,
Martin Rode,
Christian Bjørnskov