The Spirit Level: Why Greater Equality Makes Us StrongerBy every measure
that matters, relatively equal nations far outperform nations where
income and wealth concentrate at the top. This powerful new book
explores these contrasts — and explains them.

"If you want to know why one country does
better or worse than another,
the first thing to look at is the extent of inequality."


  [The Spirit Level] 
<http://bbpbooks.teachingforchange.org/book/9781608190362> A review of
Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, The Spirit Level: Why Greater
Equality Makes Us Stronger. Bloomsbury Press, 2009

        Huge numbers of people in the United States hold prescriptions
for anti-depressants. Huge numbers of other Americans
"self-medicate" — through illegal drugs and alcohol. Huge
numbers of Americans, in other words, are feeling plenty of pain. Why?
What's causing all this anguish?

Our conventional wisdom blames the grind of our always-on-the-go modern
existence, the stresses and strains of life in the fast lane. The
conventional wisdom, suggests this splendid new book, has that
half-right. Stress is indeed doing us in. But that stress doesn't
come from "modern life."

That stress comes from inequality, the vast  gaps in income and wealth
that so divide us.

How can the authors of The Spirit  Level, Richard Wilkinson and Kate
Pickett, be so sure? They've crunched the  numbers. All of them, you
might say.

These two distinguished epidemiologists have identified nearly every
social problem where reliable data let us compare how well — or
poorly — the major nations of the developed world are delivering a
decent quality of life.

Epidemiologists study the health of populations, and Wilkinson and
Pickett have, naturally enough, included in their comparisons all the
basic health yardsticks. In which developed nations, they ask, do people
live the longest? What nations show the highest levels of obesity? Where
in the developed world do people suffer the most mental illness?

But the comparisons don't stop there. In which nations, Wilkinson
and Pickett wonder, do children do the best in school? Where do people
born at the bottom of the economic ladder have the best shot at climbing
up? Which nations send the most people to prison? Have the most teenage
moms? Exhibit the highest levels of trust? Tally the most homicides?

Wilkinson and Pickett answer all these questions — and many more.
And their answers fascinate. The nations of the developed world, so
alike on the trappings of daily life, turn out to differ enormously on
the markers that measure how well we lead our lives.

People in some developed nations, the data show, can be anywhere from
three to ten times more likely than people in other developed nations to
be obese or get murdered, to mistrust others or have a pregnant teen
daughter, to become a drug addict or escape from poverty.

And the nations that do the best,  on yardstick after yardstick, all
turn out to share one basic trait. They all share  their wealth.

"If you want to know why one country does better or worse than
another," as Wilkinson and Pickett note simply, "the first thing
to look at is the extent of inequality."

The United States, the developed world's most unequal major nation,
ranks at or near the bottom on every quality-of-life indicator that
Wilkinson and Pickett examine. Portugal and the UK, nations with levels
of inequality that rival the United States, rank near that same bottom.

Japan and the Scandinavian nations, the world's most equal major
developed nations, show the exact opposite trend line. They all rank, on
yardstick after yardstick, at or near the top.

And we see the same pattern within the United States. America's most
equal states — New Hampshire, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Vermont
— all consistently outperform the least equal, states like
Mississippi and Alabama.

People in more equal societies simply live longer, healthier, and
happier lives than people in more unequal societies. And not just poor
people in these societies, Wilkinson and Pickett emphasize continually,
but all people.

If you have a middle class income in an unequal society, you're
going to be more stressed and less healthy — mentally and physically
— than someone with the same income in a more equal society.

So what makes inequality so potent a curse? Wilkinson and Pickett
explore the impact of inequality from all sorts of angles.
Sociologically, for instance, they explain how "the stresses of a
more unequal society — of low social status — have penetrated
family life and relationships," how inequality undercuts the sense
and reality of community and fosters, in their place, suspicion and
fear.

"We tend to choose our friends from among our near equals and have
little to do with those much richer or much poorer," the two authors
note. "And when we have less to do with other kinds of people,
it's harder for us to trust them."

The wider the economic gaps  between us, The Spirit Level helps us
understand, the more social status matters. The more social status
matters, the more likely we will be to feel shame and humiliation. The
more stress these emotions evoke in us, the weaker we get.

"Chronic stress," The Spirit Level observes, "wears us down
and wears us out."

Want the biochemistry behind that wearing down? The Spirit Level has it
for you, in passages you don't have to be a biochemist to
comprehend. Wilkinson and Pickett can speak academese as well as anyone.
But they don't speak that here. They've attempted instead to
make a generation's worth of scholarship on inequality accessible to
the general public. And they've succeeded.

The Spirit Level appeared earlier  this year in Britain. Wilkinson and
Pickett, one British daily noted
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/mar/12/equality-british-society>
,  may have produced "the most important book of the year." They
have. Anyone can  order
<http://www.penguin.co.uk/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9781846140396,00.html>
will  appear
<http://www.amazon.com/Spirit-Level-Equality-Societies-Stronger/dp/16081\
90366/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1249162675&sr=8-1>  the end of this year.
the British edition, right now, online. An American edition

"In the past," Wilkinson and Pickett note as they close this
remarkable book, "when arguments about inequality centered on the
privations of the poor and on what is fair, reducing inequality depended
on coaxing or scaring the better-off into adopting a more altruistic
attitude to the poor."

But that's all changed, the authors point out, now that "we know
that inequality affects so many outcomes, across so much of
society." Reducing inequality, they add, has become "a project
in which we all have a shared interest."

http://toomuchonline.org/a-self-help-book-for-societies/











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