'Swedish model' outranks 'American dream'

Most Americans would rather live somewhere like Sweden.

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WASHINGTON (AFP) - Forget the socialist-bashing rhetoric and reverence for the 
filthy rich, when it comes to wealth distribution, Americans -- even 
Republicans -- would really rather live somewhere like Sweden.

According to a soon-to-be published study by researchers at Harvard and Duke 
universities, Americans believe US society is much more equal than it really 
is, and want it to be even fairer.

Business school professors Michael Norton and Dan Ariely asked 5,522 Americans 
about US wealth distribution and how it should look if things could be changed.

"Respondents vastly underestimated the actual level of wealth inequality in the 
United States, believing that the wealthiest quintile (20 percent) held about 
59 percent of the wealth when the actual number is closer to 84 percent."

Studies show current US wealth inequality is near record highs, with the top 
one percent of Americans estimated to hold around 50 percent of the nation's 
wealth.

According to Norton and Ariely this tops "even the levels seen just before the 
Great Depression in the 1920s."

But when asked how they would like the United States to look, respondents 
picked "wealth distributions that were far more equitable than even their 
erroneously low estimates of the actual distribution."

In a blind test, about 92 percent of respondents said they preferred a model 
closer to Sweden's wealth distribution to that seen in the United States.

The study's authors also reported a "surprising level of consensus" among 
different groups, with 92 percent of Republican voters backing the Swedish 
model versus 93.5 percent of Democratic voters, with the richest and poorest 
also voting along similar lines.

"All demographic groups -- even those not usually associated with wealth 
redistribution such as Republicans and the wealthy -- desired a more equal 
distribution of wealth than the status quo."

On average the top 20 percent of earners were seen as holding just 32 percent 
of wealth, less than the 84 percent in reality.

But anyone hoping this augurs well for a revolution will be disappointed.

Even if Americans become more aware of the wealth gap that exists, Norton and 
Ariely suggest they may misplaced faith in the "American Dream" to correct it.

"Just as people have erroneous beliefs about the actual level of wealth 
inequality, they may also hold overly optimistic beliefs about opportunities 
for social mobility in the United States -- beliefs which in turn may drive 
support for unequal distributions of wealth."

Disagreements about the causes of inequality may also drown out the consensus.

The authors also suggest there is a gap between what people would like to see 
and the policies they are willing to support to get there.

The study is to be published in the journal "Perspectives on Psychological 
Science."

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