Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T15:28:36.990Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Why Africans tolerate income inequality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 August 2021

Philip Nel*
Affiliation:
Politics Programme, University of Otago, New Zealand, and Department of Political Science, Stellenbosch University, South Africa

Abstract

African attitudes to income inequality have hardly been studied. As a result, we may have been missing a crucial part of the answer to the question why Africa is so unequal. This paper presents evidence that, across all self-identified class categories, African respondents in 16 African states, representative of all the regions of the continent, are on average considerably more tolerant of inequality than respondents from 43 comparable developing and transition countries. The aim of the paper is to try and explain these differences. It concludes that (a) a modified version of Albert Hirschman's notion of the ‘tunnel effect’ and (b) religious devotedness in the African context provide explanations for the observed variation between African respondents and their counterparts elsewhere. Experienced inequality, in contrast to overall income distribution, influences the tunnel effect more widely than economic growth. Religious belief shapes inequality tolerance in Africa more than the observance of religious practices.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Andersen, R. & Curtis, J.. 2013. ‘Public opinion on social spending: 1980–2005’, in Banting, K. & Myles, J., eds. The New Politics of Redistribution in Canada. Victoria: UBC Press, 141–64.Google Scholar
Beegle, K., Christiaensen, L., Dabalen, A. & Gaddis, I.. 2016. ‘Poverty in a Rising Africa.’ Africa Poverty Report 2016. Washington, DC: World Bank Group.Google Scholar
Benabou, R. & Ok, E.. 2001. ‘Mobility and the demand for redistribution: the POUM hypothesis’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 116, 2: 447–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bigsten, A. 2016. ‘Determinants of the evolution of inequality in Africa’, Journal of African Economies 27, 1: 122.Google Scholar
Bratton, M. & Van de Walle, N.. 1997. Democratic Experiments in Africa: regime transitions in comparative perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Choi, G. 2019. ‘Revisiting the redistribution hypothesis with perceived inequality and redistributive preferences’, European Journal of Political Economy 58: 220–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chong, A. & Gradstein, M.. 2019. ‘Institutional persistence, income inequality, and individual attitudes’, Journal of Economic Inequality 17, 3: 401–13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clementi, F., Fabiani, M. & Molini, V.. 2019. ‘The devil is in the detail: growth, inequality and poverty reduction in Africa in the last two decades’, Journal of African Economies 28, 4: 408–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cramer, B. & Kaufman, R.. 2011. ‘Views of economic inequality in Latin America’, Comparative Political Studies 44, 9: 1206–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curtis, J. & Andersen, R.. 2015. ‘How social class shapes attitudes on economic inequality: the competing forces of self-interest and legitimation’, International Review of Social Research 5, 1: 419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, L. 2019. ‘Growth, inequality and the tunnel effects: a formal model’, Journal of Happiness Studies, 20: 1103–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eidelman, S. & Crandall, C.. 2009. ‘A psychological advantage for the status quo’, in Jost, J., Kay, A. & Thorisdottir, H., eds. Social and Psychological Bases of Ideology and System Justification. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 85106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fairbrother, M. 2014. ‘Two multilevel modelling techniques for analyzing comparative longitudinal survey datasets’, Political Science Research and Methods 2, 1: 119–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gimpelson, V. & Treisman, D.. 2015. ‘Misperceiving inequality.’ NBER Working Paper No. 21174. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haggard, S., Kaufman, R. & Long, J.. 2013. ‘Income, occupation, and preferences for redistribution in the developing world’, Studies in Comparative International Development 48: 113–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hirschman, A. 1973. ‘The changing tolerance for income inequality in the course of economic development’ (with a mathematical note by M. Rothschild), Quarterly Journal of Economics 87, 4: 544–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inglehart, R., Haerpfer, C., Moreno, A., Welzel, C., Kizilova, K., Diez-Medrano, J., Lagos, M., Norris, P., Ponarin, E. & Puranen, B.. 2014. ‘World Values Survey: All Rounds Country-Pooled Datafile’, <http://www.worldvaluessurvey.org>, accessed 15.6.2019.,+accessed+15.6.2019.>Google Scholar
Joshanloo, M. & Weijers, D.. 2016. ‘Religiosity moderates the relationship between income inequality and life satisfaction across the globe’, Social Indicator Research 128: 731–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kahneman, D. & Tversky, A.. 1979. ‘Prospect theory: an analysis of decision under risk’, Econometrica 47, 2: 263–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katic, I. & Ingram, P.. 2018. ‘Income inequality and subjective well-being: towards an understanding of its relationship and its mechanisms’, Business & Society 57, 6: 1010–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lierse, H. 2019. ‘Why is there not more demand for redistribution? Cross-national evidence for the role of social justice beliefs’, International Journal of Public Opinion Research 31, 1: 121–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lindert, P. 2004. Growing Public: social spending and economic growth since the eighteenth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lloyd, P. 1974. Power and Independence: urban Africans' perception of social inequality. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Melber, H., ed. 2016. The Rise of Africa's Middle Class: myths, realities and critical engagements. London: Zed Books.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meltzer, A. & Richard, S.. 1981. ‘A rational theory of the size of government’, Journal of Political Economy 89, 5: 914–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milanovic, B. 2000. ‘The median-voter hypothesis, income inequality, and income redistribution: an empirical test with the required data’, European Journal of Political Economy 16, 3: 367410.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milanovic, B. 2010. ‘Four critiques of the redistribution hypothesis: an assessment’, European Journal Political Economy 26, 1: 147–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mueller, L. 2014. ‘Beyond ethnicity: African protests in an age of inequality’, PhD thesis, University of California at Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Nel, P. 2018. ‘Redistribution with African characteristics’, Politikon 45, 2: 145–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nel, P. 2019. ‘Inequality in Africa’, in Binns, T., Lynch, K. & Nel, E., eds. The Routledge Handbook of African Development. London: Routledge: 104–19.Google Scholar
Opoku, K.A. 1978. West African traditional religion. Accra: FEP International Private Ltd.Google Scholar
Persson, T. & Tabellini, G.. 1994. ‘Is inequality harmful for growth?’, American Economic Review 84, 3: 600–21.Google Scholar
Piketty, T. 1995. ‘Social mobility and redistributive politics’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 110, 3: 551–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ravallion, M. & Lokshin, M.. 2000. ‘Who wants to redistribute? The tunnel effect in 1990s Russia’, Journal of Public Economics 76, 1: 87104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ray, D. 2010. ‘Uneven growth: a framework for research in development economics’, Journal of Economic Perspectives 24, 3: 4560.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheve, K. & Stasavage, D.. 2006. ‘Religion and preferences for social insurance’, Quarterly Journal of Political Science 1: 255–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schröder, M. 2017. ‘Is income inequality related to tolerance for inequality?’, Social Justice Research 30, 1: 2347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Senik, C. 2009. ‘Direct evidence on income comparisons and their welfare effects’, Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 72, 1: 408–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shariff, A., Wiwad, D. & Aknin, L.. 2016. ‘Income mobility breeds tolerance for income inequality: cross-national and experimental evidence’, Perspectives on Psychological Science 11, 3: 373–80.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shimeles, A. & Nabassaga, T.. 2018. ‘Why is inequality high in Africa?’, Journal of African Economies 27, 1: 108–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sigman, R. & Lindberg, S.. 2017. ‘Neopatrimonialism and Democracy: An Empirical Investigation of Africa's Political Regimes.’ Working Paper Series 2017: 56. Gothenburg: The Varieties of Democracy Institute.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solt, F. 2019. ‘Measuring Income Inequality Across Countries and Over Time: the Standardized World Income Inequality Database.’ SWIID Version 8.2, November 2019. <https://fsolt.org/swiid/>, accessed 10.11.2019.,+accessed+10.11.2019.>Google Scholar
Solt, F., Habel, P. & Grant, J.T.. 2011. ‘Economic inequality, relative power, and religiosity’, Social Science Quarterly 92, 2: 447–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, I. 2016. ‘Dependency redux: why Africa is not rising’, Review of African Political Economy 43, 147: 825.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trump, K-S. 2013. The Status Quo and Perceptions of Fairness: how income inequality influences public opinion. PhD dissertation, Harvard University.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van de Walle, N. 2009. ‘The institutional origins of inequality in sub-Saharan Africa’, Annual Review of Political Science 12: 307–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Welzel, C. 2013. Freedom Rising: human empowerment and the quest for emancipation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar