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

United States News News

It’s no great surprise, but now there’s proof that the rich get what they want | Torsten Bell
United States Latest News,United States Headlines
  • 📰 GuardianAus
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 57 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 26%
  • Publisher: 98%

Those with more money are more likely to agree with policy changes than the less well-off

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., 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 . But what is staggering is how consistent it is across countries and decades.. 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.Torsten Bell is chief executive of the Resolution Foundation. Read more at resolutionfoundation.org

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

GuardianAus /  🏆 1. in AU

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Great Scott: Cowboys No.1 gun fires in win over KnightsA return to form by Scott Drinkwater trumped the return of Kalyn Ponga as the Cowboys hung on to beat Newcastle 18-16 at Queensland Country Bank Stadium on Saturday night.
Read more »

Australian comedy great Barry Humphries dies in hospital aged 89Australian comedy great Barry Humphries dies in hospital aged 89Barry Humphries, the man responsible for some of Australia’s most loved characters including Dame Edna Everage, has died at age 89.
Read more »

Australian comedy great Barry Humphries dies in hospital aged 89Australian comedy great Barry Humphries dies in hospital aged 89Breaking: Barry Humphries, the man responsible for some of Australia’s most loved characters including Dame Edna Everage, Sir Les Patterson and Sandy Stone, has died at age 89
Read more »

AFL lauded for ‘great touch’ in pre-game Anzac ceremony: ‘Goosebumps’AFL lauded for ‘great touch’ in pre-game Anzac ceremony: ‘Goosebumps’The AFL is being lauded for an added touch to the Anzac pre-game ceremony at Optus Stadium for the round-opening clash between Fremantle and Western Bulldogs. 7NEWS
Read more »

The great Kiwi exodus: New Zealanders look to Australia for a better lifeThe great Kiwi exodus: New Zealanders look to Australia for a better lifeSarah Arnold still remembers the day her partner said the three magic words: "book the tickets".
Read more »

The great Kiwi exodus: New Zealanders look to Australia for a better lifeThe great Kiwi exodus: New Zealanders look to Australia for a better lifeSarah Arnold still remembers the day her partner said the three magic words: "book the tickets".
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-04-03 04:45:09