Income changes do not influence political involvement in panel data from six countries

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Sebastian Jungkunz, Paul Marx

In: European Journal of Political Research 61 (2022), 3, 829-841

Abstract

The income gradient in political participation is a widely accepted stylized fact. This article asks how income effects on political involvement unfold over time. Using nine panel datasets from six countries, it analyzes whether income changes have short-term effects on political involvement, whether effects vary across the life-cycle, and whether parental income has an independent influence. Irrespective of indicator, specification, and method (hybrid models, inclusion of lags and leads, error-correction models), we find neither significant short-term effects of income changes nor life-cycle variation in these effects. However, parental income does seem to affect political socialization. Descriptive evidence and latent-growth-curve modeling based on household panels show that articipatory inequality by parental income is already large before voting age. Poorer voters do not catch up with their richer peers in their twenties. This implies an urgent need for research on (political) inequality in youth and childhood.



Keywords: Participation, political inequality, panel data, socialization, income
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12495

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