心理信息
心理学
出勤
最低工资
不平等
经济不平等
测量数据收集
劳动经济学
人口经济学
经济
经济增长
梅德林
政治学
数学
统计
数学分析
法学
作者
Daniela Goya‐Tocchetto,M. Asher Lawson,Shai Davidai,Richard P. Larrick,B. Keith Payne
摘要
The minimum wage can be an effective policy tool for mitigating economic inequality, but public demand for higher minimum wages has not kept up with rising levels of income disparities. In our first study using protest attendance data over a six-and-a-half-year period in the United States (N = 130,562), we find evidence that higher economic inequality was associated with fewer and less well-attended protests targeted at changing economic conditions and raising minimum wages. We corroborate this finding across eight laboratory experiments (N = 7,286)-including a U.S. nationally representative sample-finding causal evidence that higher levels of income inequality decrease support for higher minimum wages. We propose that this decreased support results from a psychological tendency to engage in "is-to-ought" reasoning, where individuals use information about how much people actually earn to determine how much they should earn. We conclude by introducing an intervention to mitigate the effects of this phenomenon and discuss implications for policy communication. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
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