How Chile’s Elite Divide on Money and Rights
Santiago, ChileMon May 04 2026
Chile’s top earners and decision-makers don’t all think the same way. Surveys from 2019-2020 with 416 influential people show big gaps between those who grew up rich and those who made their own fortune. The research splits elites into economic (business leaders), political (lawmakers and officials), and cultural (artists, academics) groups. It asks two key questions: Should the government tax the wealthy more to help the poor? And how open should Chile be to outsiders, LGBTQ+ rights, and equal opportunities?
Findings show a clear split. Those born into elite families or running businesses lean toward keeping things as they are. They often resist higher taxes for social programs and prefer strict rules on immigration and social change. Meanwhile, newcomers who climbed the ladder tend to support fairness in pay and rights. This isn’t just a business vs. politics fight—even within each group, old-money and self-made elites clash.
The study used special math tools to map these splits. It turns out where power comes from—family, politics, or money—shapes views more than people think. The biggest divide? Economic elites and inherited wealth stand firm on tradition. Others, even in the same circle, push for progress. The message is simple: power doesn’t guarantee one mindset. Background and how you got to the top matter just as much.
https://localnews.ai/article/how-chiles-elite-divide-on-money-and-rights-de46af65
actions
flag content