Inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that matters

Inheritance fundamentally violates the meritocratic justice principle of society. Despite the high level of wealth concentration and the fact that few people would be affected, political support for an inheritance tax is rather low. The topic of inheritance is not only about wealth but about values....

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Main Authors: Pirmin Fessler, Martin Schürz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Public Finance 2020-12-01
Series:Public Sector Economics
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.pse-journal.hr/upload/files/pse/2020/4/2.pdf
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spelling doaj-9d3b1da30d8b4a21b8d36edf68a424092020-12-01T06:06:35ZengInstitute of Public FinancePublic Sector Economics2459-88602020-12-0144446348210.3326/pse.44.4.26302Inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that mattersPirmin Fessler0Martin Schürz1 Oesterreichische Nationalbank, Vienna, Austria Oesterreichische Nationalbank, Vienna, Austria Inheritance fundamentally violates the meritocratic justice principle of society. Despite the high level of wealth concentration and the fact that few people would be affected, political support for an inheritance tax is rather low. The topic of inheritance is not only about wealth but about values. We combine both by using questions in the Austrian Household Finance and Consumption Survey tailored to examine family values. The main aim of the paper is to bring sociological concepts and perceptions into the economic analysis of the role of inheritance in wealth distribution. We find several inconsistencies in people’s perceptions concerning the relation of inheritance to issues of social justice. We argue that family values are decisive for negative perceptions of inheritance taxation. Our empirical evidence suggests that in order to understand the resistance to inheritance taxation in society better, family values have to be taken into account. The main aim of the paper is to deliver empirical evidence for bringing an interdisciplinary approach, including sociological concepts, into economic analysis when analysing the relationship between inheritance, wealth and taxation. http://www.pse-journal.hr/upload/files/pse/2020/4/2.pdf inheritance tax; wealth distribution; austrian household finance and consumption survey; austria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pirmin Fessler
Martin Schürz
spellingShingle Pirmin Fessler
Martin Schürz
Inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that matters
Public Sector Economics
inheritance tax; wealth distribution; austrian household finance and consumption survey; austria
author_facet Pirmin Fessler
Martin Schürz
author_sort Pirmin Fessler
title Inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that matters
title_short Inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that matters
title_full Inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that matters
title_fullStr Inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that matters
title_full_unstemmed Inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that matters
title_sort inheritance and equal opportunity - it is the family that matters
publisher Institute of Public Finance
series Public Sector Economics
issn 2459-8860
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Inheritance fundamentally violates the meritocratic justice principle of society. Despite the high level of wealth concentration and the fact that few people would be affected, political support for an inheritance tax is rather low. The topic of inheritance is not only about wealth but about values. We combine both by using questions in the Austrian Household Finance and Consumption Survey tailored to examine family values. The main aim of the paper is to bring sociological concepts and perceptions into the economic analysis of the role of inheritance in wealth distribution. We find several inconsistencies in people’s perceptions concerning the relation of inheritance to issues of social justice. We argue that family values are decisive for negative perceptions of inheritance taxation. Our empirical evidence suggests that in order to understand the resistance to inheritance taxation in society better, family values have to be taken into account. The main aim of the paper is to deliver empirical evidence for bringing an interdisciplinary approach, including sociological concepts, into economic analysis when analysing the relationship between inheritance, wealth and taxation.
topic inheritance tax; wealth distribution; austrian household finance and consumption survey; austria
url http://www.pse-journal.hr/upload/files/pse/2020/4/2.pdf
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AT martinschurz inheritanceandequalopportunityitisthefamilythatmatters
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