Polarization under rising inequality and economic decline
Alexander J. Stewart, Nolan McCarty, Joanna J. Bryson

TL;DR
This paper presents a cultural evolution framework showing how rising inequality and economic decline can lead to social polarization, with risk-averse in-group strategies spreading and persisting even after conditions improve.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model linking economic factors to polarization through socialization strategies and provides empirical evidence connecting income inequality to affective polarization.
Findings
In-group polarization can spread rapidly and persist over time.
Economic decline and inequality promote risk-averse, in-group strategies.
Empirical data supports income inequality as a driver of polarization in the US.
Abstract
Social and political polarization is a significant source of conflict and poor governance in many societies. Thus, understanding its causes has become a priority of scholars across many disciplines. Here we demonstrate that shifts in socialization strategies analogous to political polarization and identity politics can arise as a locally-beneficial response to both rising wealth inequality and economic decline. Adopting a perspective of cultural evolution, we develop a framework to study the emergence of polarization under shifting economic environments. In many contexts, interacting with diverse out-groups confers benefits from innovation and exploration greater than those that arise from interacting exclusively with a homogeneous in-group. However, when the economic environment favors risk-aversion, a strategy of seeking low-risk interactions can be important to maintaining individual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCulture, Economy, and Development Studies · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Social Capital and Networks
