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Journal article

Inequality and Trust: Testing a Mediating Relationship for Environmental Sustainability

This paper examines whether income level, rather than income distribution, explains at least part of the negative correlation between inequality and social trust.

Eric Kemp-Benedict / Published on 21 February 2013

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Citation

Kemp-Benedict, E. (2013). Inequality and Trust: Testing a Mediating Relationship for Environmental Sustainability. Sustainability 5(2), 779-788.

Instrumental arguments linking inequality to environmental sustainability often suppose a negative relationship between inequality and social cohesion. While social cohesion is difficult to measure, there are measures of a narrower concept, social trust, and empirical studies have shown that social trust is negatively related to inequality.

The author tests whether at least part of the observed relationship may be explained by income level, rather than income distribution. He uses individual response data from the World Values Survey at the income decile level, and finds evidence that income level is indeed important in explaining differences in levels of social trust, but it is insufficient to explain all of the dependence.

In the sample used for the study, he finds that both income level and income distribution help explain differences in social trust between countries.

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SEI author

Eric Kemp-Benedict
Eric Kemp-Benedict

SEI Affiliated Researcher

SEI US

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10.3390/su5020779 Open access
Topics and subtopics
Economy : Sustainable lifestyles
Related centres
SEI Asia

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