Institute of Sociology
of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology
of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Anikin V.A., Lezhnina Yu.P. Income Stratification: Putting a Spotlight on the Boundaries. Russian sociological review, 2018, VOL.17, Issue 1, pp. 237-273.



Anikin V.A., Lezhnina Yu.P. Income Stratification: Putting a Spotlight on the Boundaries. Russian sociological review, 2018, VOL.17, Issue 1, pp. 237-273.
ISSN 1728-192Х
DOI 10.17323/1728-192X-2018-1-237-273

Posted on site: 09.04.18

Текст статьи на сайте журнала: URL: https://sociologica.hse.ru/data/2018/03/31/1164761471/SocOboz_17_1_237-273_Anikin_Lezhnina.pdf (дата обращения 09.04.2018)


Abstract

The paper aims to deliver an extended review of both Russian and international studies that have contributed considerably to the income strati cation discourse. The very importance of the given research is justi ed by the lack of systematic studies in the field of the one-dimensional strati cation of the Russian society, although applied socio-economic research uses broadly one- dimensional classi cations based on income. The given paper considers and systemizes the results of income groups classi cations developed both within the absolute and relative approaches. At the present time, neither international nor Russian studies propose a conventional view on the boundaries between income groups while at the same time developing a model of income strati cation applicable to industrially-advanced societies. The main reason is that researchers dealing with income scales are normally focused on speci c social groups such as the poor, the middle class, the a uent, and the rich rather than the whole society and its structure. Furthermore, we have shown that sociological papers are more likely to support the relative approach, and particularly a median approach. Researchers have even reached a fragile consensus regarding some of the boundaries of this scale, that is, they seem to agree that the interval of 0,75–1,25 of median incomes allows for the determination of the economic middle class for industrially advanced societies. The majority of scholars are in agreement that incomes exceeding the 2 and below the 0,5 medians represent the boundaries that distinguish opposing social groups, that is, the top and bottom of a society, correspondingly. The present study has a multidisciplinary focus so that it might be of interest to sociologists, economists, demographers, and applied statisticians.

 

Content (in russ)