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Photo by kind permission of Matt Stuart Income inequality & social dysfunction Richard Wilkinson Emeritus Professor of Social Epidemiology University of.

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Presentation on theme: "Photo by kind permission of Matt Stuart Income inequality & social dysfunction Richard Wilkinson Emeritus Professor of Social Epidemiology University of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Photo by kind permission of Matt Stuart Income inequality & social dysfunction Richard Wilkinson Emeritus Professor of Social Epidemiology University of Nottingham Medical School

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3 Life expectancy and GDP per person

4 www.equalitytrust.org.uk Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level Life expectancy in rich countries is no longer related to National Income per head

5 Richest Poorest Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level www.equalitytrust.org.uk Life expectancy is strongly related to income within rich countries

6 Income gaps How many times richer are the richest fifth than the poorest fifth? Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level www.equalitytrust.org.uk Inequality... How much richer are the richest 20% in each country than the poorest 20%?

7 Health and social problems with social gradients and internationally comparable data Life expectancy Math & Literacy Infant mortality Homicides Imprisonment Teenage births Trust Obesity Mental illness – incl. drug & alcohol addiction Social mobility

8 Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level Index of: Life expectancy Math & Literacy Infant mortality Homicides Imprisonment Teenage births Trust Obesity Mental illness – incl. drug & alcohol addiction Social mobility www.equalitytrust.org.uk Health and social problems are worse in more unequal countries Index of health and social problems

9 www.equalitytrust.org.uk Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level Neither health nor social problems are related to national income per head Index of: Life expectancy Math & Literacy Infant mortality Homicides Imprisonment Teenage births Trust Obesity Mental illness – incl. drug & alcohol addiction Social mobility Index of health and social problems

10 www.equalitytrust.org.uk Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level Child Wellbeing is not related to National Income per head

11 www.equalitytrust.org.uk Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level Child well-being is better in more equal countries

12 Inequality change 2000-2010 (gini) Child wellbeing Change 2000-2010 Changes in inequality and child wellbeing (UNICEF Index) Pickett & Wilkinson, Pediatrics 135, S39-S47 (2015).

13 Social Mobility is lower in countries with bigger income differences

14 Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level www.equalitytrust.org.uk People in more unequal countries trust each other less

15 www.equalitytrust.org.uk Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level Imprisonment rates are higher in more unequal countries

16 Daly M, Wilson M, Vasdev S. Income inequality and homicide rates in Canada and the United States. Can J Crim 2001; 43: 219-36. Homicide rates are higher in more unequal US states and Canadian provinces USA states Canadian provinces

17 17 Cuernavaca, Mexico

18 ‘Armed Response’ - Pretoria, South Africa.

19 Bowles & Jayadev, NYT 2014 Protective service employees per 10,000 workers 19 Societies with wider Income differences need more “guard labor” The proportion of ‘guard’ labor grew with inequality. USA 1979-2000 Inequality (Gini)

20 IndicatorInternationalUS 50 States Census Gini UN 20:20OECD Gini rprprp Child wellbeing-071<0.01-0.680.01-- Trust-0.66<0.01-0.660.03-0.70<0.01 Life expectancy-0.440.04-0.270.24-0.45<0.01 Infant mortality0.420.040.540.010.43<0.01 Obesity0.57<0.010.410.060.47<0.01 Mental illness0.73<0.010.320.300.180.12 Education score-0.450.04-0.460.05-0.47.01 Teen birth rate0.73<0.010.64<0.010.46<0.01 Homicides0.470.020.440.040.42<0.01 Imprisonment0.75<0.010.510.020.48<0.01 Social mobility0.93<0.010.83<0.01-- Index0.87<0.010.75<0.010.59<0.01 Correlations: different measures and settings 20

21 Leon, D. A., D. Vagero, et al. (1992). "Social class differences in infant mortality in Sweden: comparison with England and Wales." Brit Med J 305(6855): 687-91. The benefits of greater equality are not confined to the poor but extend to all social classes Infant mortality by class: Sweden compared with England & Wales

22 Time lags between changes in inequality and changes in health Zheng H. Do people die from income inequality of a decade ago? Social Science & Medicine 2012;75(1):36-45. Lillard DR, Burkhauser RV, Hahn MH, Wilkins R. Does early-life income inequality predict self- reported health in later life? Evidence from the United States. Social Science & Medicine 2015;128(0):347-55.

23 Pickett K, Wilkinson R. Income inequality and health: a causal review. Social Science & Medicine 2015; 128: 316-26

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25 Income differences increase social class differentiation Bigger income differences:- Class becomes more important The social pyramid is higher and more hierarchical The quality of social relations deteriorates

26 The Effect of Caste Identity on Children's Performance Caste Unannounced Caste Announced Number of mazes solved Source: Hoff K, Pandey P, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 3351, June 2004 Status differentiation has a direct effect on cognitive performance

27 Layte R, Whelan CT. Who Feels Inferior? A Test of the Status Anxiety Hypothesis of Social Inequalities in Health. European Sociological Review, 2014. Status Anxiety across income deciles for high, medium and low inequality countries Status Anxiety Income deciles Countries with: High inequality Medium inequality Low inequality

28 Other tasks Tasks with ‘social evaluative threat’ (uncontrollable) Cortisol response (effect size) Dickerson SS, Kemeny ME. Acute stressors and cortisol responses. Psychological Bulletin 2004; 130(3): 355-91. What kind of stressful tasks raise stress hormones most?

29 The Dominance Behavioural System Research on the Dominance Behavioural System, (using self- reports, observational, experimental and biological methods), shows that:- Externalizing disorders, mania proneness, and narcissistic traits are related to heightened dominance motivation and behaviour. Mania and narcissistic traits are also related to inflated self- perceptions of power. Anxiety and depression are related to subordination, submissiveness and the desire to avoid subordination. Johnson SL, Leedom LJ, Muhtadie L. The Dominance Behavioral System and Psychopathology. Psychological Bulletin, 2012; 138(4): 692-743.

30 www.equalitytrust.org.uk Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level Mental illness is more common in more unequal societies

31 Messias E, Eaton WW, et al.. Economic grand rounds: Income inequality and depression across the United States: an ecological study." Psychiatric Services, 2011; 62(7): 710-2. Depression is more common in more unequal states Percent of population depressed in past 2 weeks Income Inequality (Gini)

32 Inequality data from World Top Incomes Database Narcissism data from Twenge JM, et al., Journal of Personality 2008; 76(4): 875-901. Narcissim Score (NPI) Rising Narcissism & Income Inequality in the USA

33 Loughnan S, et al. Economic Inequality is linked to biased self-perception. Psychological Science, 2011; 22: 1254 Self enhancement increases in more unequal societies

34 Two recent studies show that inequality increases conspicuous consumption and consumerism People in more unequal areas of the USA are more likely to buy high status cars Data from Google searches shows that people in more unequal states and more unequal countries are more likely to search for status goods

35 School bullying is much more common in more countries with bigger income differences. 11-year-olds in 37 countries (r =.62) Elgar FJ. et al. School bullying, homicide and income inequality. International Journal of Public Health 58, 237-245, 2013. Income inequality (Gini) % of 11yr olds who bullied others two or more times per month

36 Alan Bennett, Untold Stories, Faber/Profile, 2005 “(My parents) put…down…most of their imagined shortcomings to their not having been educated, education (was) to them a passport to everything they lacked: self- confidence, social ease and above all the ability to be like other people. Put simply and as they themselves would have put it, both my parents were shy, a shortcoming they thought of as an affliction while at the same time enshrining it as a virtue. I assured them, falsely, that everybody felt much as they did but that social ease was something that could and should be faked. ‘Well, you can do that,’ Dad would say, ‘you've been educated,’ adding how often he felt he had nothing to contribute. ‘I'm boring, I think. I can't understand why anybody likes us. I wonder sometimes whether they do, really.’

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38 The Jekyll & Hyde of Public Health? Friendship in contrast, is based on reciprocity, mutuality, social obligations, sharing and a recognition of each other’s needs. Social status (dominance hierarchies, pecking orders) are orderings based on power, coercion and privileged access to resources – regardless of the needs of others.

39 Companion Spanish: Compañero; French: Copain from the Latin “Con” (with) and “Pan” (bread) - someone with whom you eat bread

40 Marshall Sahlins “Gifts make friends and friends make gifts” Stone Age Economics (1974)

41 A two stage process: parental experiences of inequality shape child development Parenting styles prepare children for the kind of social relations they may have to deal with in adulthood Preparation for a society dependent on:- trust, cooperation, reciprocity, empathy? or: fending for yourself, not trusting others?

42 19901995200020052010 Income inequality (Gini) 22 24 30 28 26 Income Inequality in Hungary 1988-2012 World Bank Data (via Quandl)

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44 USA UK Germany Ireland Australia Sweden Netherlands Percent of all income going to top 1% 1930-2014 Source: World Top Incomes Database % of income received by richest 1%

45 Economic democracy:- “turns companies from being pieces of property into communities” reduces pay ratios within companies transforms the experience of work redistributes wealth & reduces unearned income improves productivity is more socially & environmentally responsible Boards can include employee, community and consumer representatives

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47 Mishel L, Sabadish N. Economic Policy Institute Brief #331. Washington, May 2012 Changing ratio of CEO pay to average pay of production & non-supervisory workers in top 350 US companies Between 1979-2007 the income of the:- Top 0.1% increased by 362% Top 1% increased by 156% Bottom 90% increased by17%

48 Colin Gordon’s analysis of Historical Statistics for the US, unionstats.com, Piketty and Saez 2003, and World Top Incomes Database. Economic Policy Institute, Washington DC. Trade Unions membership (% workforce) and Share of Income going to top 10% (USA, 1918-2008) 48

49 Belfield C, Cribb J, Hood A, Joyce R. Living Standards, Poverty and Inequality in the UK: 2015. (Institiute for Fiscal Studies, 2015). Trends in Income inequality Gini and 90:10 ratio. Institute For Fiscal Studies, BHC, GB.

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51 How to expand the democratic sector ( employee owned companies, coops, mutuals) Stronger legislation for employee representation on company boards Government loans for employee buyouts Tax concessions for democratic businesses Take your custom to the democratic sector If each year 2% of company shares were transferred to an employee controlled trust, they would be majority shares holders in 25 years

52 52 http://www.equalitytrust.org.uk http://www.fabians.org. uk/publications/a- convenient-truth/

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54 Well-being and long-term illness in relation to feeling shamed Data from Swedish Liv & Halsa survey 2004. Starrin B, Wettergren A. Shame and humiliation in narrative social life. (forthcoming). Number of ways people felt shamed in last 3 months

55 Relative Risk of death 0 Stress (GHQ-12 score) Russ TC, Stamatakis E, Hamer M, Starr JM, Kivimäki M, Batty GD. Distress and mortality. BMJ 2012;345:e4933. Even low levels of stress increase death rates Health Survey for England 1994-2004. n=68,222; deaths = 8365


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