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Religion, Clubs, and Emergent Social Divides

Michael Makowsky

No 2009-03, Working Papers from Towson University, Department of Economics

Abstract: Arguments for and against the existence of an American cultural divide are frequently placed in a religious context. This paper seeks to establish that, all politics aside, the American religious divide is real, that modern religious polarization is not a uniquely American phenomenon, and that religious divides can be understood as naturally emergent within the club theory of religion. Analysis of the 2005 Baylor University Religion Survey reveals a bimodal distribution of religious commitment in the United States. International survey data reveals bimodal distributions in twenty-five of twenty-nine surveyed countries. The club theory of religion, when applied in a multi-agent model, generates bimodal distributions of religious commitment whose emergence correlates to the substitutability of club goods for standard goods and the mean population wage rate. This tendency towards religious polarization has important ramifications for majority rule electoral outcomes when religion is politically salient. Majority rule, principally analogous to the statistical median, is a non-robust estimator of voter preferences when they are bimodally distributed. Given recent evidence that religiosity has come to dominate income as a determinant of voter preferences, small errors can be anticipated to disproportionately affect electoral outcomes in the U.S.

Keywords: Culture Divide; Religious Divide; Club Theory; Multi-Agent Model; Sacrifice and Stigma. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 35 pages
Date: 2009-09, Revised 2010-05
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-cdm, nep-pol and nep-soc
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)

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http://webapps.towson.edu/cbe/economics/workingpapers/2009-03.pdf First version, 2009 (application/pdf)

Related works:
Journal Article: Religion, clubs, and emergent social divides (2011) Downloads
Working Paper: Religion, Clubs, and Emergent Social Divides (2009) Downloads
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