Perceived Economic Inequality Is Negatively Associated with Subjective Well-being through Status Anxiety and Social Trust
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/107088Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
García Sánchez, Efraín; Matamoros Lima, Juan; Moreno Bella, Eva; Melita, Davide; Sánchez Rodríguez, Ángel; García Castro, Juan Diego; Rodríguez Bailón, Rosa María; Willis Sánchez, Guillermo ByrdMateria
Perceived economic inequality Income inequality Status anxiety Social trust Social dominance orientation Subjective well-being
Fecha
2024Referencia bibliográfica
García-Sánchez, E., Matamoros-Lima, J., Moreno-Bella, E. et al. Perceived Economic Inequality Is Negatively Associated with Subjective Well-being through Status Anxiety and Social Trust. Soc Indic Res 172, 239–260 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-024-03306-x
Patrocinador
MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011033: PID2022-140252NB-I00 yPID2022-140048NBI00; Joint Research Programme on Democratic Governance in a Turbulent Age; Spain Research Agency [AEI, PCI2020-112285; PID2019-105643GB-I00]; European Commission; Horizon 2020 under grant agreement No 822166; Centre for Social Conflict and Cohesion Studies-COES (ANID/FONDAP/15130009).; University of Costa Rica (723-C4-004)Resumen
The relationship between economic inequality and subjective well-being has produced mixed results in the literature. Conflicting evidence may be due to overlooking the role of psychosocial processes that translate socioeconomic conditions into subjective evaluations.
We argue that perceiving high economic inequality erodes social capital, undermining people’s subjective well-being. We rely on the Psychosocial Model of Perceived Economic Inequality and Subjective Well-Being (PEISW), which posits that perceived economic inequality negatively affects subjective well-being by increasing status anxiety and decreasing social trust. Furthermore, these indirect effects from perceived inequality to subjective well-being will be moderated by system-justifying ideologies. The present article provides the first empirical test of this model using a national survey from Spain (N = 1,536). We confirmed that perceived economic inequality is negatively associated with well-being. We also found that perceived economic inequality had an indirect negative effect on subjective well-being via increasing status anxiety and reducing social trust. We found no evidence that system-justifying ideologies (i.e., social dominance orientation) moderated the association between perceived economic inequality and subjective well-being. We discuss that perceived economic inequality is crucial to understanding the link between economic inequality and subjective well-being and elaborate on the role of psychosocial mechanisms that promote competition and undermine social cohesion.





