Event

On the relative deservingness of capital and labor by Vanessa Valero

Behavioural, Experimental, and Development Economics Research Seminar Series, Spring Term 2024

  • Wed 6 Mar 24

    11:00 - 12:30

  • Colchester Campus

    Economics Common Room 5B.307

  • Event speaker

    Vanessa Valero

  • Event type

    Lectures, talks and seminars
    Behavioural, Experimental, and Development Economics Seminar Series

  • Event organiser

    Economics, Department of

Join us for this week's event in the Behavioural, Experimental and Development Economics Seminar Series, Spring Term 2024

Join Vanessa Valero, from the University of Leicester, as they present their research on the relative deservingness of capital and labor.

Abstract

The allocation of production rewards between capital and labor is a topic of long-standing interest to economists, with recent growing attention due to rising capital shares and inequality. We study, using pre-registered experiments with representative samples of the US and the Swiss populations, perceptions of fairness in the allocation of rewards to work and investment. Our design holds constant many factors that may influence individuals’ policy preferences over such allocations. In the experiment, two participants provide separate inputs to production, either in the form of monetary investment or work effort; a different participant allocates the production rewards between the investor and the worker. We find substantial heterogeneity in perceived deservingness, but also observe a tendency to allocate a greater share to labor than to capital. Our measure of the tendency to favor one input over the other predicts attitudes and policy-relevant voting behavior in support of policies that differentially reward capital and labor. Overall, our findings indicate that people perceive different input factors as differentially deserving and that such fairness views directly impact policy preferences.

  

This seminar will be held in the Economics Common Room on Wednesday 6 March, at 11.00am. This event is open to all levels of study and is also open to the public. To register your place, please contact the seminar organisers.

This event is part of the Behavioural, Experimental, and Development Economics Research Seminar Series.