Middle class values have long been perceived as drivers of social cohesion and
growth. This paper investigates the relation between class (measured by position
in the income distribution), values, and political orientations using comparable
values surveys for six Latin American countries.
The analysis finds that both a
continuous measure of income and categorical measures of income-based class are
robustly associated with values. Both income and class tend to display a similar
association to values and political orientations as education, although
differences persist in some important dimensions.
Overall, there is no strong
evidence of any "middle class particularism": values appear to gradually shift
with income, and middle class values are between the ones of poorer and richer
classes. If any, the only peculiarity of middle class values is moderation.
The
analysis also finds changes in values across countries to be of much larger
magnitude than the ones dictated by income, education, and individual
characteristics, suggesting that individual values vary primarily within bounds
dictated by each society.
Latin American countries–Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico and Peru.
The World Bank. Author:Lopez-Calva,Luis F.;Rigolini,Jamele;Torche, Florencia.Document Date: 2011/11/01.Document Type: Policy Research Working Paper.Report Number: WPS5874. Volume No: 1 of 1
28 pages
|
Official Version
|
[1.96 mb]
| |
Text Version*
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
prueba