eprintid: 3881 rev_number: 5 eprint_status: archive userid: 69 dir: disk0/00/00/38/81 datestamp: 2018-01-24 12:00:47 lastmod: 2018-01-24 12:00:47 status_changed: 2018-01-24 12:00:47 type: article metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Bilancini, Ennio creators_name: Boncinelli, Leonardo creators_id: ennio.bilancini@imtlucca.it creators_id: title: Redistribution and the Notion of Social Status ispublished: pub subjects: HB divisions: EIC full_text_status: none keywords: Social status; Consumption externalities; Redistribution; Signaling; Conspicuous consumption; Income inequality abstract: We study the impact of redistributive policies when agents can signal their social status by spending on a conspicuous good. Our focus is on how the shape of the status function – i.e., how social status is computed and evaluated – can affect the equilibrium outcome of the model, and in particular the relationship between inequality and wasteful conspicuous consumption. We find that if status depends in an ordinal way on individuals' relative standing in terms of economic resources, then redistributing resources from the rich to the poor increases social waste because it forces the rich to spend more on conspicuous consumption in order to differentiate themselves from the poor. If, instead, status depends in a cardinal way on individuals' relative standing, then a redistribution of resources in favor of the poor can reduce social waste. This is possible because under cardinal status there is an additional effect: a lesser degree of inequality decreases the value of social status and, hence, reduces the incentives to engage in wasteful social competition. If this second effect is stronger than the first one, then social waste reduces. In this case a Pareto improvement is also possible but it requires, in addition, that the rich save enough on costly signaling to compensate for the losses due to the reduction of economic resources. date: 2012 date_type: published publication: Journal of Public Economics volume: 96 publisher: Elsevier pagerange: 651-657 id_number: doi: 10.1016/j.jpubeco.2012.05.007 refereed: TRUE issn: 0047-2727 official_url: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpubeco.2012.05.007 citation: Bilancini, Ennio and Boncinelli, Leonardo Redistribution and the Notion of Social Status. Journal of Public Economics, 96. pp. 651-657. ISSN 0047-2727 (2012)