Economic elites' attitudes toward meritocracy in Chile: A moral economy perspective
Artículo
Open/ Download
Access note
Acceso a solo metadatos
Publication date
2020Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Atria, Jorge
Cómo citar
Economic elites' attitudes toward meritocracy in Chile: A moral economy perspective
Abstract
We analyze economic elites' perceptions and beliefs about meritocracy from a moral economy perspective. A moral economy perspective considers how norms and beliefs structure socioeconomic practices through the constitution and expression of what is considered acceptable, proper, and legitimate. Our study explores how economic elites make sense of the roles of talent and effort in the distribution of resources and how they reconcile the idea of meritocracy within a rigid social order. The site of our study is Chile, a country with fluid mobility between low and middle classes, but with high and persistent disparities and strong barriers to elite positions. We conducted 44 semistructured interviews with shareholders, board members, and high-level executives of large or high-turnover companies in three major Chilean cities. We find that the economic elite strongly support meritocracy but explain access to top positions based on talent rather than effort. The economic elite define talent in terms of business and leadership skills. They attribute upward mobility in the private sector to meritocratic practice. At the same time, they view the public sector as the epitome of nonmeritocratic practices, incompetence, and inefficiency. They profess empathy with the poor, but they reject redistributive policies. The economic elite believe in the primacy of competition in economic life and the necessity of continual economic growth, and thus, they understand meritocracy as both the means to survive in a market economy and a responsible approach to lead national development.
Patrocinador
National Research and Development Agency (ANID) under FONDECYT
1160921
11181223
1191522
Centre for Social Conflict and Cohesion Studies, COES (ANID/Fondap)
15130009
National Research Center for Integrated Disaster Risk Management (ANID/Fondap)
15110017
Indexation
Artículo de publicación ISI Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Quote Item
American Behavioral Scientist, vol. 64, 9: pp. 1219-1241: 0002764220941214
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: