What Drives Gender Gaps in Preferences for Redistribution? New Evidence from the European Social Survey

Number: 161
Year: 2025
Author(s): Monica Bozzano, Simona Scabrosetti

We investigate the gender gaps in preferences for redistribution using data from the European Social Survey (ESS) over the period spanning from 2002 to 2022. We integrate individual-level socioeconomic and demographic characteristics, attitudinal factors, and macro-level influences. Our findings confirm significant differences among genders, with women generally expressing stronger preferences for redistribution than men. However, we uncover the multidimensionality of these gaps. Through a Gelbach decomposition analysis, our study identifies differences in beliefs and attitudes, especially egalitarian values and political ideology, as primary drivers of the observed gaps. Additionally, we document that not all women are more redistributive than men. The gender gaps, indeed, are neither uniform across age cohorts nor along different country-level conditions. Overall, the adult gender gap is the most pronounced, even if this evidence varies along macroeconomic contexts, across welfare regimes, and over time. Our  findings underscore the complexity of redistributive preferences, representing a challenge for future policy design from a gender-sensitive perspective.

Keywords: preferences for redistribution, gender gaps, self-interest, attitudes and beliefs, contextual
factors, cohort differences, welfare regimes
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