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Inequality acceptance among children : an empirical analysis of the development of social preferences through childhood and adolescence in China and Norway

Rong, Victoria; Søbstad, Ingunn
Master thesis
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URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2648145
Date
2019
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  • Master Thesis [4656]
Abstract
Inequality is a pressing social issue and inequality considerations figure prominently in

almost all spheres of society. The general perception of whether an inequality is fair or

not, is often related to the source of the inequality. Inequality in cases of differences

in productivity may be easier to justify for some, than inequality that is due to luck.

Furthermore, people often seek to maximize surplus and as a consequence some may

not believe a redistribution can be justified if it is costly (Konow, 2003). This thesis

investigates how children manage distributive conflicts between children their own age.

Using a real effort dictator game with a spectator design with nearly 1700 children as

participants, we compare how children’s inequality acceptance vary with age in two

societies characterized by very different levels of income inequality, China (Shanghai) and

Norway.

The data used in this thesis have been collected as the second part of a project organized

by FAIR/The Choice Lab at the Norwegian School of Economics. Based on the data from

the experiment there was no evidence to say that there is a systematical difference in

inequality acceptance between children in the two countries. Furthermore, we found that

merit considerations are equally important in both of the societies, while we found mixed

evidence of the importance of efficiency considerations for children in the two societies.

Our results indicates that 17-year-old children in both societies accept substantially more

inequality compared to 9-year-old children. In both Norway and China, merit and efficiency

considerations become more important with age. Additionally, our results show that

children in China and Norway have a similar development in their social preferences. Most

of the 9-year-old children are categorized as egalitarians, while most of the 17-year-old

children have a meritocratic fairness view.

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