The Guardian (USA)

It’s no great surprise, but now there’s proof that the rich get what they want

- • Torsten Bell is chief executive of the Resolution Foundation. Read more at resolution­foundation.org Torsten Bell

We aim to bring you surprising and important findings from the world of research. I fear this week’s offering may not manage the “surprising” part but it is important.

In a great new study, Swedish researcher­s investigat­ed how policy outcomes reflect public attitudes towards those policies. They looked across 30 European countries over 38 years on issues ranging from welfare to immigratio­n, foreign policy to the environmen­t.

The good news from the democracy side of things is that more popular policies are more likely to happen. Phew.

But the authors go on to ask: who specifical­ly is more likely to get what they want? The rich. That’s less good.

The size of the difference isn’t enormous – the average share of households who support policy that happens was 57.1% for rich households and 53.7% among low-income ones (the middle class… is in the middle). But what is staggering is how consistent it is across countries and decades.

We’ve known for a very long time that American politics is sensitive to the preference­s of the rich. That’s generally been seen as obvious – a system where having or raising huge amounts of cash is a prerequisi­te for being competitiv­e electorall­y is a politics with a price tag, and in a highly unequal country it’s the rich that can pay to play.

But this research is telling us that high-income citizens are more likely to agree with policy changes than low-income citizens in all but two European countries, and that income inequality levels or tightness of financial rules around political campaignin­g don’t seem to be driving the effect.

In democracy you can’t always get what you want, but being rich gets your chances up. Who knew?

 ?? Photograph: Salvatore Di Nolfi/EPA ?? A voter casts a ballot for the 2022 French presidenti­al election.
Photograph: Salvatore Di Nolfi/EPA A voter casts a ballot for the 2022 French presidenti­al election.

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