Is this a surprise to anyone? Selfishness and Altruism and Politics.
December 12, 2018 at 5:46 pm
(This post was last modified: December 12, 2018 at 6:07 pm by Angrboda.)
Quote:This paper investigates – in a large heterogeneous sample – the relationship between social preferences on the one hand, and socioeconomic factors and political references on the other hand. Socioeconomic factors correlate with social preferences, and social preferences robustly shape political attitudes and voting behavior in a particular way: Selfish subjects are the extremists on one side of the political spectrum – they are more likely to vote for a right-wing party, they are less inclined to favor redistribution and they are more likely to self-assess themselves as right-wing than all the other types. Inequality-averse subjects, altruists and maxi-min sit at the opposite end of the political spectrum, while all the other types behave less systematically and in a less extreme fashion. Overall, our evidence indicates that elicited social preferences are externally valid as a predictor for political attitudes, and that social preferences are fairly stable across contexts and over longer periods of time.
Social Preferences and Political Attitudes:: An Online Experiment on a Large Heterogeneous Sample
One might be tempted to argue that the extremists are, well, extremists, and their views are not representative of the majority. Unfortunately that falls down in two areas. First, it has been the tendency of conservatives and conservative movements to be led and heavily influenced by extremists. One only has to draw attention to things such as the Moral Majority and the growing acceptance of conspiracy theories and science denialism among the right to see this. The other area is that, while extremists do hold a lot of sway among conservatives and Republicans, the left is far more divided on the impulses of the extreme leftists, as evidenced by the mixed results in the 2018 midterms between centrist Democrats and more extreme progressives. The left still engages conciliation and moves toward the center to some extent, while the right continues to become more extreme.
Is there something I'm missing in this analysis? Am I wrong to be worried that national policy is being led by the nose by people likely motivated by selfishness?