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Preferences for income and wealth limits: Evidence from a survey experiment

Preferences for income and wealth limits: Evidence from a survey experiment
Preferences for income and wealth limits: Evidence from a survey experiment
This paper investigates preferences for imposing maximum limits on top incomes and wealth through a survey-based experiment with a large sample of US and German participants (N = 3,954). We first find that a significant majority favor the introduction of limits to both the income of top executives and the wealth of entrepreneurs (have limitarian preferences). Raising awareness of possible efficiency costs has only a small effect on reducing support for limits, while allowing firms rather than governments to set limits has a larger significant positive impact in the support for income caps. Limitarian preferences are consistent across countries and predict actual voting behavior in a petition that required effort to sign. Then, using a revealed preferences approach, we show that many participants with limitarian preferences are motivated by inequality aversion (weak limitarians), consistent with social preference models. However, a sizable minority of participants support limits even when within-firm income (or within-country wealth) inequality is minimized (strong limitarians). We find that motives that do not usually feature in traditional models, such as the potential negative externalities created by income and wealth accumulation, may partly explain strong limitarian preferences. Interestingly, preferences for wealth caps are more polarized than for income limits, with a higher share of both strong limitarians and those who oppose limits in the wealth domain. Our findings provide new evidence on the structure and motivations behind public attitudes toward executive pay regulation and wealth taxation.
Executive compensation, Income cap, Limitarian preferences, Limitarianism, Wealth cap, Wealth taxation
0014-2921
Ferreira, João V.
0aad606a-eab0-473c-a230-9b3dfa2d7d93
Ramoglou, Stratos
af0997b6-8cb9-4d84-966f-4044d537c518
Savva, Foivos
8af4d90b-c08d-4133-93a1-3a8b3c2da24b
Vlassopoulos, Michael
2d557227-958c-4855-92a8-b74b398f95c7
Ferreira, João V.
0aad606a-eab0-473c-a230-9b3dfa2d7d93
Ramoglou, Stratos
af0997b6-8cb9-4d84-966f-4044d537c518
Savva, Foivos
8af4d90b-c08d-4133-93a1-3a8b3c2da24b
Vlassopoulos, Michael
2d557227-958c-4855-92a8-b74b398f95c7

Ferreira, João V., Ramoglou, Stratos, Savva, Foivos and Vlassopoulos, Michael (2026) Preferences for income and wealth limits: Evidence from a survey experiment. European Economic Review, 183, [105231]. (doi:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2025.105231).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper investigates preferences for imposing maximum limits on top incomes and wealth through a survey-based experiment with a large sample of US and German participants (N = 3,954). We first find that a significant majority favor the introduction of limits to both the income of top executives and the wealth of entrepreneurs (have limitarian preferences). Raising awareness of possible efficiency costs has only a small effect on reducing support for limits, while allowing firms rather than governments to set limits has a larger significant positive impact in the support for income caps. Limitarian preferences are consistent across countries and predict actual voting behavior in a petition that required effort to sign. Then, using a revealed preferences approach, we show that many participants with limitarian preferences are motivated by inequality aversion (weak limitarians), consistent with social preference models. However, a sizable minority of participants support limits even when within-firm income (or within-country wealth) inequality is minimized (strong limitarians). We find that motives that do not usually feature in traditional models, such as the potential negative externalities created by income and wealth accumulation, may partly explain strong limitarian preferences. Interestingly, preferences for wealth caps are more polarized than for income limits, with a higher share of both strong limitarians and those who oppose limits in the wealth domain. Our findings provide new evidence on the structure and motivations behind public attitudes toward executive pay regulation and wealth taxation.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 December 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 December 2025
Published date: March 2026
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Authors.
Keywords: Executive compensation, Income cap, Limitarian preferences, Limitarianism, Wealth cap, Wealth taxation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508704
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508704
ISSN: 0014-2921
PURE UUID: 878211d3-8993-4a26-bb8b-fa6d829f6e05
ORCID for João V. Ferreira: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6393-8667
ORCID for Foivos Savva: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6613-8721
ORCID for Michael Vlassopoulos: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3683-1466

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Date deposited: 30 Jan 2026 17:46
Last modified: 31 Jan 2026 07:05

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Contributors

Author: Stratos Ramoglou
Author: Foivos Savva ORCID iD

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