Mads Andreas Elkjær

Mads Andreas Elkjær

@madselk.bsky.social

437 Followers 166 Following 18 Posts Joined Oct 2023
1 week ago
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Tax exposure and political preferences Abstract. How do people form preferences over tax policy proposals? This article introduces the concept of tax exposure to explain the determinants of tax

Tax exposure and political preferences
doi.org/10.1093/ser/...
Paper in Socio-Economic Review by @nuffieldcollege.bsky.social Fellow @benansell.bsky.social, Asli Cansunar and Mads Andreas Elkjær

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ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR IN POLITICAL SCIENCE (294884) | NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology Job title: ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR IN POLITICAL SCIENCE (294884), Employer: NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Deadline: Wednesday, April 29, 2026

We have a vacant position as Associate Professor in Political Science (International Relations). Deadline April 29. Please apply or distribute. www.jobbnorge.no/en/available...

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1 month ago

Thrilled to see our paper (with @madselk.bsky.social and @benansell.bsky.social) out in West European Politics!

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1 month ago
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Homeownership and political efficacy: how housing wealth shapes whether people feel heard Why do some citizens feel that political institutions are responsive to people like them, while others do not? Existing research highlights the role of education and income in shaping external poli...

Just out in @wepsocial.bsky.social: how housing wealth shapes whether people feel heard. Together with @madselk.bsky.social and @benansell.bsky.social, I looked at a neglected determinant of political efficacy: homeownership.

Read the #OA paper: doi.org/10.1080/0140...

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1 month ago
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Homeownership and political efficacy: how housing wealth shapes whether people feel heard
doi.org/10.1080/0140...
Paper in @wepsocial.bsky.social by Associate Member @mhaslberger.bsky.social, @madselk.bsky.social and @nuffieldcollege.bsky.social Fellow @benansell.bsky.social

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6 months ago

We've talked to the team at @worldpolitics.bsky.social about our recent paper on inheritance taxation. This is what came out of it. Have a look!

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6 months ago
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Figure 3 from "Why is it so Hard to Counteract Wealth Inequality" illustrates how people with low #wealth are much less likely to have an opinion about #inheritance #taxation than people with high wealth @madselk.bsky.social @benansell.bsky.social @aslicansunar.bsky.social @mhaslberger.bsky.social

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6 months ago

@benansell.bsky.social @aslicansunar.bsky.social @mhaslberger.bsky.social @jacobnyrup.bsky.social

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6 months ago

If anything, the electoral incentives point to further lowering a tax that is highly unpopular among those who hold opinions, families of homeowners. Countering wealth inequality through inheritance taxation is thus likely to be electorally very challenging for governments 13/13

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Our findings help make sense of why governments don’t do more to address wealth inequality: since those who should be most supportive of inheritance taxation hold either no or ambivalent preferences, governments lack strong electoral incentives to implement higher taxes 12/n

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And while information on how higher taxes can increase equality of opportunity had little impact, arguments that the inheritance tax is a 'death' or 'double' tax lowered support for higher taxes 11/n

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These treatments lowered “don’t know” answers among low-wealth individuals and also affected support for inheritance taxation. Information that higher inheritance taxation could lead to lower income taxes or better public goods provisions increased support for the tax 10/n

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In a follow-up survey, we therefore implemented much more direct treatments that informed respondents about some of the most popular arguments for and against inheritance taxation 9/n

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First, we test the effect of statistical information about house prices. We find no effect of our treatments, suggesting that factual information about wealth inequality does address the root cause of why some respondents are unable to formulate views on inheritance taxation 8/n

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In a second step, we assess whether different kinds of information can help low-wealth individuals to express an opinion consistent with their material interest in higher inheritance taxes 7/n

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It helps explain why governments, despite high and rising levels of wealth inequality, have not done more to alleviate it: Public opinion is disproportionately driven by informed and mobilized families of homeowners, who support low inheritance taxes 6/n

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Combined, these findings raise what we call "the paradox of inheritance taxation": the people who would stand to benefit the most from higher inheritance taxes are those least likely to be informed and hold an opinion on the issue 5/n

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Whereas about only 2 in 5 low-wealth individuals expressed an opinion in our surverys, about 19 of 20 high-wealth individuals did. AND not only were respondents of high wealth more likely to express an opinion, they also supported lower inheritance taxes 4/n

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Crucially for the electoral politics of inheritance taxation, individuals from families of low wealth (renters and their children) were much less likely to register an opinion compared to those from high-wealth families (homeowners and their children) 3/n

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A core reason governments are reluctant to counteract wealth inequality through inheritance taxation, we argue, is that many people have never thought much about their views of the tax. In our surveys of the UK, about 40% answered “don’t know” to our questions about it 2/n

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Project MUSE - Why is it so Hard to Counteract Wealth Inequality? Evidence from the United Kingdom

Did you ever wonder why governments don’t do more to counteract wealth inequality? In our new @worldpolitics.bsky.social article, we seek to answer this question, studying the electoral politics of inheritance taxation muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/articl... 1/n

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7 months ago
Estimating public opinion from surveys: the impact of including a “don't know” response option in policy preference questions | Political Science Research and Methods | Cambridge Core Estimating public opinion from surveys: the impact of including a “don't know” response option in policy preference questions - Volume 13 Issue 3

Our paper (w/ @cbwlezien.bsky.social) is now in print! Perhaps of interest to survey researchers contemplating whether/how to use the DK response option when measuring the public's policy preferences. www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

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7 months ago

Really fantastic contribution by @madselk.bsky.social and @cbwlezien.bsky.social for applied researchers thinking about how to write questions. Attentive to respondent user experience by specific mode, differences across topics, and implications for substantive research findings

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8 months ago

Haha men lidt grotesk alligevel :)

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8 months ago

På trods af jeg underviser i statskundskab på KU og bedømmer dusinvis af opgaver hvert semester er jeg tilsyneladende ikke god nok til at blive en del af det danske censorkorps. Men jeg kan jo altid søge igen til februar 2029..

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