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Changes in Americans’ Racial Attitudes Have Increased Support for Welfare

Karyn Vilbig

Social Science Quarterly, 2025, vol. 106, issue 1

Abstract: Objective This article documents changes in Americans’ attitudes toward redistributive policy since 2012 and explores the extent to which we can rightfully credit the increases in support for government aid to shifts in racial attitudes as opposed to other concurrent forces. Methods Using the 2016–2020 GSS panel, I employ fixed‐effects models to quantify how within‐person changes in racial attitudes are related to support for redistributive policies in 2020. I then perform KOB decomposition analysis using the 2012 and 2020 ANES to determine how much of the change in Americans’ support for redistributive policies can be explained by changes in the values and/or effects of their racial attitudes. Results Americans have indeed exhibited large increases in their support for redistributive policies since 2012, and a sizable portion of these increases can be attributed to changes in their racial attitudes and the effects of these racial attitudes. These changes are strongest among Democrats but can even be found among Republicans. Conclusion In the past, many Americans opposed government aid because they believed it benefitted Black people. Today, many Americans support government aid for precisely the same reason.

Date: 2025
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