• Skip navigation
  • Skip to navigation
  • Skip to the bottom
Simulate organization breadcrumb open Simulate organization breadcrumb close
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Chair of Empirical Economic Sociology WiSo
  • FAUTo the central FAU website
  1. Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
  2. Rechts- und Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät
Suche öffnen
  • Deutsch
  • WiSo
  • StudOn
  • UnivIS
  1. Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
  2. Rechts- und Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Chair of Empirical Economic Sociology WiSo
Navigation Navigation close
  • Home
  • Team
    • Head of Chair
    • Secretariat
    • Scientific staff
    • Former employees
    • External Lecturer
    Portal Team
  • Teaching and Courses
    • Degree Programmes
    • Courses
    • Theses
    • Going abroad
    Portal Teaching and Courses
  • Research
    • Current Publications
    • A life-course perspective on labor supply
    • Objective and Subjectively Experienced Financial Inequalities in Income and Wealth and Their Consequences
    • Using Deepfakes for Experiments in the Social Sciences: Studies on Discrimination
    Portal Research
  • Links
  1. Home
  2. Research
  3. Objective and Subjectively Experienced Financial Inequalities in Income and Wealth and Their Consequences

Objective and Subjectively Experienced Financial Inequalities in Income and Wealth and Their Consequences

In page navigation: Research
  • Current Publications
  • A life-course perspective on labor supply
  • Objective and Subjectively Experienced Financial Inequalities in Income and Wealth and Their Consequences
  • Using Deepfakes for Experiments in the Social Sciences: Studies on Discrimination

Objective and Subjectively Experienced Financial Inequalities in Income and Wealth and Their Consequences

Objective and Subjectively Experienced Financial Inequalities in Income and Wealth and Their Consequences

Social inequality is a major theme in the current societal and political discourse. In particular financial inequality – the gap between the rich and the poor – has drawn substantive interest in research and public debates alike. A host of research linked financial inequality to various social problems and negative outcomes. The dominant methodological approach in this research is to look at correlations between an objective measure of financial inequality, such as the Gini index, and outcomes across countries or regions. Despite abundant research theorizing and let alone actual data about the underlying mediators are rare. Relatedly it is unclear how objective levels of inequality that correlate with negative outcomes across societies are represented individually. After all, both from a social psychological and a sociological perspective it is usually not the objective situation that influences individuals but how the objective situation is subjectively represented. The proposed research aims to fill this gap by investigating a) whether and how subjective representations of inequality relate to the various mediators proposed in previous research (e.g. trust, status competition, perceived fairness), b) the causal role of subjective as well as objective levels of inequality. In addition to measuring the respective concepts we will go beyond correlational studies and experimentally manipulate individuals’ subjective representations of inequality. Moreover, we plan to experimentally vary objective financial inequality in economic games in order to assess its causal impact on assumed mediators. Finally, we plan to link a large-scale survey for Germany with data on wages and employment histories and analyze the effects of objective and subjective inequality at the firm level as well as potential mediators on life satisfaction and health using longitudinal methods.

 

Project team:

Tobias Wolbring, Herbert Bless, Michaela Wänke, Tilman Wörz

 

Funding:

DFG  2021 bis 2024

Chair of Empirical Economic Sociology
Prof. Dr. Tobias Wolbring

Findelgasse 7/9
90402 Nürnberg
Germany
  • Login
  • Impressum
  • Facebook
  • RSS Feed
  • Twitter
  • Xing
Up