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AuthorSage Mitchell, Jocelyn
AuthorGengler, Justin J.
Available date2019-06-18T11:20:41Z
Publication Date2018-05-30
Publication NamePolitical Research Quarterly
CitationMitchell, Jocelyn Sage. Gengler, Justin J. What Money Can’t Buy: Wealth, Inequality, and Economic Satisfaction in the Rentier State. Political Research Quarterly 2019, Vol. 72(1) 75–89
ISSN1065-9129
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/11635
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1065912918776128
AbstractHow do perceived inequalities in allocation impact citizen satisfaction with state-distributed benefits in rentier societies? Resource-rich rentier regimes are widely theorized to maintain the economic and political satisfaction of subjects through wealth distribution. Yet, while qualitative research in the rentier states of the Arabian Peninsula has identified unequal distribution as a source of discontent, the relative importance of objective versus subjective factors in shaping satisfaction at the individual level has never been systematically evaluated. Here we assess the impacts of inequality on the nexus between wealth and satisfaction among citizens of the richest rentier regime in the world: the state of Qatar. Using original, nationally representative survey data, we test the effects of two separate mechanisms of unequal distribution previously identified in the literature: group-based discrimination, and variation in individual access owing to informal influence. Results show that perceptions of both group- and individual-based inequality dampen satisfaction with state-distributed benefits, irrespective of objective socioeconomic well-being. The findings demonstrate that even in the most affluent of rentier states, economic satisfaction derives not only from absolute quantities of benefits but also from subjective impressions of fairness in the distribution process.
Languageen
PublisherSAGE Publications
Subjectrents
authoritarianism
Qatar
state-society relationship
distribution
wasta
TitleWhat Money Can’t Buy: Wealth, Inequality, and Economic Satisfaction in the Rentier State
TypeArticle
Pagination75–89
Issue Number1
Volume Number72
ESSN1938-274X
dc.accessType Full Text


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