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A 32-society investigation of the influence of perceived economic inequality on social class stereotyping

  • Porntida Tanjitpiyanond
  • , Jolanda Jetten
  • , Kim Peters
  • , Ashwini Ashokkumar
  • , Oumar Barry
  • , Matthew Billet
  • , Maja Becker
  • , Robert W. Booth
  • , Diego Castro
  • , Juana Chinchilla
  • , Giulio Costantini
  • , Egon Dejonckheere
  • , Girts Dimdins
  • , Yasemin Erbas
  • , Agustín Espinosa
  • , Gillian Finchilescu
  • , Ángel Gómez
  • , Roberto González
  • , Nobuhiko Goto
  • , Aya Hatano
  • Lea Hartwich, Somboon Jarukasemthawee, Jaya Kumar Karunagharan, Lindsay M. Novak, Jinseok P. Kim, Michal Kohút, Yi Liu, Steve Loughnan, Ike E. Onyishi, Charity N. Onyishi, Micaela Varela, Iris S. Pattara-angkoon, Müjde Peker, Kullaya Pisitsungkagarn, Muhammad Rizwan, Eunkook M. Suh, William Swann, Eddie M.W. Tong, Rhiannon N. Turner, Niels Vanhasbroeck, Paul A.M. Van Lange, Christin Melanie Vauclair, Alexander Vinogradov, Grace Wacera, Zhechen Wang, Susilo Wibisono, Victoria Wai Lan Yeung
  • University of Queensland
  • University of Exeter
  • Stanford University
  • Cheikh Anta Diop University
  • University of British Columbia
  • Université de Toulouse
  • Sabancı Üniversitesi
  • University College London
  • Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  • National Distance Education University
  • University of Milan - Bicocca
  • KU Leuven
  • Tilburg University
  • University of Latvia
  • University of the Witwatersrand
  • Hitotsubashi University
  • IdeaLab Inc.
  • Osnabrück University
  • Chulalongkorn University
  • University of Nottingham Malaysia
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Yonsei University
  • University of Trnava
  • Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
  • The University of Edinburgh
  • University of Nigeria
  • Akanu-Ibiam Federal Polytechnic
  • New York University
  • University of Cambridge
  • MEF University
  • University of Haripur
  • University of Texas at Austin
  • National University of Singapore
  • Queens University Belfast
  • Instituto Universitário de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL)
  • Kyiv National Taras Shevchenko University
  • Fudan University
  • Universitas Islam Indonesia
  • Lingnan University

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

8 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

There is a growing body of work suggesting that social class stereotypes are amplified when people perceive higher levels of economic inequality—that is, the wealthy are perceived as more competent and assertive and the poor as more incompetent and unassertive. The present study tested this prediction in 32 societies and also examines the role of wealth-based categorization in explaining this relationship. We found that people who perceived higher economic inequality were indeed more likely to consider wealth as a meaningful basis for categorization. Unexpectedly, however, higher levels of perceived inequality were associated with perceiving the wealthy as less competent and assertive and the poor as more competent and assertive. Unpacking this further, exploratory analyses showed that the observed tendency to stereotype the wealthy negatively only emerged in societies with lower social mobility and democracy and higher corruption. This points to the importance of understanding how socio-structural features that co-occur with economic inequality may shape perceptions of the wealthy and the poor.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)367-382
Número de páginas16
PublicaciónEuropean Journal of Social Psychology
Volumen53
N.º2
DOI
EstadoPublicada - mar. 2023

ODS de las Naciones Unidas

Este resultado contribuye a los siguientes Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible

  1. ODS 10: Reducción de las desigualdades
    ODS 10: Reducción de las desigualdades

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