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Want the Good Life? Your Neighbors Need It, Too

New research shows that, among developed countries, the healthiest and happiest aren't those with the highest incomes but those with the most equality. Epidemiologist Richard Wilkinson discusses why.
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Moldova, Photo by Stelios Lazakis

Outside a cathedral in Moldova, wedding guests walk by a panhandler. According to Richard Wilkinson's research, inequality within a society erodes mental, physical, and community health.

Photo by Stelios Lazakis

We live in a world of deep inequality, and the gap between the rich and the poor is widening. We in the rich world generally agree that this is a problem we ought to help fix—but that the real beneficiaries will be the billions of people living in poverty. After all, inequality has little impact on the lives of those who find themselves on top of the pile. Right?

Not exactly, says British epidemiologist Richard Wilkinson.

For decades, Wilkinson has studied why some societies are healthier than others. He found that what the healthiest societies have in common is not that they have more—more income, more education, or more wealth—but that what they have is more equitably shared.

In fact, it turns out that not only disease, but a whole host of social problems ranging from mental illness to drug use are worse in unequal societies. In his latest book, The Spirit Level: Why More Equal Societies Almost Always Do Better, co-written with Kate Pickett, Wilkinson details the pernicious effects that inequality has on societies: eroding trust, increasing anxiety and illness, encouraging excessive consumption.

The good news is that increased equality has the opposite effect: statistics show that communities without large gaps between rich and poor are more resilient and their members live longer, happier lives.

YES! Magazine web editor Brooke Jarvis sat down with Richard Wilkinson to discuss the surprising importance of equality—and the best ways to build it.


Richard Wilkinson

Epidemiologist Richard Wilkinson is the author, with Kate Pickett, of The Spirit Level: Why More Equal Societies Almost Always Do Better.

Brooke: You've studied the impact of inequality on public health for a long time. Did any of your recent findings surprise you?

Richard: Oh, all of them. In fact, the relationship is weaker for health than for many other problems—we looked at life expectancy, mental illness, teen birthrates, violence, the percent of populations in prison, and drug use. They were all not just a little bit worse, but much worse, in more unequal countries. If I'd known how strong those connections would be, I would have looked for them a decade earlier. In fact, I'm still surprised that no one did look at them earlier.

There's nothing complicated in what we've done. Epidemiologists and people working in public health have been doing this work for some time, not only controlling for relative poverty, but for all the income levels within, for instance, an American state. So once you know the relationship between income and death rates, for example, you should be able to predict what a state's death rate will be. Actually, though, that doesn't produce a good prediction; what matters aren't the incomes themselves but how unequal they are. If you're a more unequal state, the same level of income produces a higher death rate.

In fact, in more unequal societies, these problems aren't higher by ten or twenty percent. There are perhaps eight times the number of teenage births per capita, ten times the homicide rate, three times the rate of mental illness. Huge differences. If social mobility were a perfect sorting system and everyone was sorted by ability, that wouldn't make the number of problems in the society greater. It wouldn't change the overall IQ of the population; it would just change the social distribution of IQ. We know from the findings that it's the status divisions themselves that create the problems. We're not making a great leap to say that this is causal. We, I think, show that it's almost impossible to find any other consistent explanation.

Brooke: It seems possible that this link hasn't been explored because we're so used to thinking of these problems as linked to poverty. To find out that they're tied not to the level of income but to the stratification of income—it's sort of an unexpected conclusion.

Richard: We show that these problems aren't affected by rich countries getting still richer. There are problems that we think of as problems of poverty because they're in the poorest areas of society, but a country like the U.S. can be twice as rich as Greece, Portugal, or Israel—the poorer of the rich, developed countries we look at—and the problems are no better even though Americans are able to buy twice as much of everything as the poorer developed societies. That doesn't make any difference; it's only the gaps between us that matter now. And that's really quite a striking thing to learn about ourselves and the effects of the social structure on us.

Brooke: How does thinking about these problems in terms of inequality rather than poverty change how we grapple with them?

Richard: I think people have been worried by the scale of social problems in our societies—feeling that though we're materially very successful, a lot of stuff is going wrong, and we don't know why. The media are always full of these social problems, and they blame parents or teachers or lack of religion or whatever. It makes an important difference to people to have an analysis that really fits, not only in a sort of academic way, but also that fits intuitions that people have had. People have intuited for hundreds of years that inequality was divisive and socially corrosive. In a way, that's all the data shows. It shows that that intuition is much truer than any of us expected.

Brooke: Your findings related to crime and imprisonment rates seem to be particularly illustrative of the way inequality can lead to social corrosion.

If you grow up in an unequal society, your actual experience of human relationships is different. Your idea of human nature changes: you think of human beings as self-interested.

Richard: We quote a prison psychiatrist who spent 25 years talking to really violent men, and he says he has yet to see an act of violence which was not caused by people feeling disrespected, humiliated, or like they've lost face. Those are the triggers to violence, and they're more intense in more unequal societies, where status competition is intensified and we're more sensitive about social judgments.

We also found very big differences in the proportion of the population that's in prison in different countries and American states. But the differences aren't driven by the amount of crime, they're driven by the fact that people in unequal societies have more punitive attitudes about crime. It may have to do with fear across classes, lack of trust, and lack of involvement in community life. If you've got to go to prison, go to prison in Japan or one of the Scandinavian countries. You might get some rehabilitation. If you go to prison in some of the more unequal countries, you are very likely to come out a good deal worse than you went in.

Brooke: When I first heard about your work, I expected the book to deal with the material impacts of inequality. But your focus is different.

Richard: Yes. This is about the psychosocial effects of inequality—the impact of living with anxiety about our feelings of superiority or inferiority. It's not the inferior housing that gives you heart disease, it's the stress, the hopelessness, the anxiety, the depression you feel around that. The psychosocial effects of inequality affect the quality of human relationships. Because we are social beings, it's the social environment and social relationships that are the most important stressors. For individuals, of course, if you're going to lose your home, or if you're terribly in debt, those can be more powerful stressors. But amongst the population as a whole, it looks as if these social factors are the biggest stressors because so many people are exposed to them.

Brooke: What psychological impact does living in an unequal society have on people who are at the top of the scale?

Richard: Status competition causes problems all the way up; we're all very sensitive to how we're judged. Think about Robert Frank's books Luxury Fever or Falling Behind, or the great French sociologist Bourdieu—they show how much of consumption is about status competition. People spend thousands of pounds on a handbag with the right labels to make statements about themselves. In more unequal countries, people are more likely to get into debt. They save less of their income and spend more. They work much longer hours—the most unequal countries work perhaps nine weeks longer in a year.

Life After Stuff
by Annie Leonard
Annie Leonard portrait, photo by Lane Hartwell
It's time for conversations about the hidden impacts of the stuff we consume—how does our culture and economy drives such massive waste generation and make it seem tolerable?

If you grow up in an unequal society, your actual experience of human relationships is different. Your idea of human nature changes. If you grow up in a consumerist society, you think of human beings as self-interested. In fact, consumerism is so powerful because we're so highly social. It's not that we actually have an overwhelming desire to accumulate property, it's that we're concerned with how we're seen all the time. So actually, we're misunderstanding consumerism. It's not material self-interest, it's that we're so sensitive. We experience ourselves through each other's eyes—and that's the reason for the labels and the clothes and the cars.

Brooke: What's the effect of inequality on the way we perceive our communities—and how does that perception affect how they function?

Richard: Inequality affects our ability to trust and our sense that we are part of a community. In a way, that is the fundamental mediator between inequality and most of these outcomes, through the damage it does to social relations. For instance, in more equal countries or more equal states, two-thirds of the population may feel they can trust others in general, whereas in the more unequal countries or states, it may drop as low as 15 percent or 25 percent.

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Jarvis, B. (2010, March 03). Want the Good Life? Your Neighbors Need It, Too. Retrieved July 29, 2010, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/want-the-good-life-your-neighbors-need-it-too. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License

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Reader Comments

Political Action Foreclosed

Posted by Mark Deneen at Mar 12, 2010 08:15 AM
This is a great article until one gets to the inevitable "What shall we do?" The suggestions all fall then neatly into political action. Underlying that premise, is some faith that there is a malleable political system in which to act. There isn't. There is only an illusion of one. Political action has been foreclosed in the USA by the corporate coup. I don't mean that euphemistically, but rather literally.

There is no longer hushed conspiratorial talk of corporate ownership of Washington, it is now discussed and debated in the open in the pages of the establishment newspapers. Not the morality of this condition mind you, only the mechanics! Should this industry be given this much or that much? Should these lobbyists be in charge of this or that bill pending Congress? Should this Congressperson align with this or that industry? Those are now the subjects of our national debate. The notion of a democratic (people-centric) influence is pure fantasy, not even worthy of consideration.

But now what? The now what is "direct action." The proper advice now is stop voting, stop perpetuating a criminal enterprise, stop investing in the corrupt culture of systematic party (gang) politics. The only thing which will count is direct human action. It may be small, it may be limited, but it is all that is left. And, no matter what else, it is satisfying to the soul.

re: Political Action Foreclosed

Posted by Greg at Apr 14, 2010 01:33 AM
I do not disagree with your assessment, I think you are right on. But you are an informed citizen. The way to change is not by leaving the debate, but by partaking in it. By spreading the word, and carrying a call to action.

You know the disease: corporate power in government. There are small steps that can be taken to stop it. Transparent campaign contributions would be a good step. Campaign finance reform would be a good step. Reform of the lobbying culture in Washington would be a good step.

I disagree wholeheartedly with your decision to withdraw from politics altogether. As people who see what is wrong, we need to be the ones standing up to the powers that be and demanding change.

re:Political Action Foreclosed

Posted by Graham at May 22, 2010 10:27 AM
One of the greatest difficulties in this debate is that the corporate world is the most gifted of all debaters in marketing their views. Think about the recent tea part movement. It is such a marketable view - thriving on cynicism and anti-government sentiment. Think about it! Those that want the rich richer and the poor poorer vote tea party, those that are disillusioned with a government that makes the rich richer and the poor poorer vote tea party. It's brilliant. Democracy's self correcting mechanism is that people question the government and are suspicious of politicians. Fox news propaganda uses this very self correcting mechanism against it! And who can dare stand against it? Who would dare say a kind word towards the government or a politician in a society where it is literally fashion to insult them and make them guilty and proven innocent? It's a brilliant ploy! With this in mind i'd encourage you to stay in the political debate - we need all those who can see through this propaganda.

With this in mind I'll be the change i want to see and do the unfashionable thing

Thankyou obama for your work on health care and wall street
and thankyou bush for your work on AIDS releif in Africa and for attempting to make a more equal education system, even if the methods are odd

unequal societies

Posted by JAY CARRIGAN at Mar 19, 2010 09:28 AM
What we do is spread the word. As Dr. Korten's friend in Indonesia said to him, go back to the US and educate people, or as David himself says, "change the story". If there's any story that dominates US society it is that each of us is master of his or her own fate -- we don't need to worry about all those others. The title of this book says it all. It says, "oh yes we do need to be concerned with the others in our societies because our welfare depends on their welfare."

Can we please get the authors on all the talk shows in the country? Please?!

David Korten's new book: 3 Ways to Get It Before It Hits Stores

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