When differences in income widen, trust disappears. The above chart shows how unequal societies have lower percentages of people who trust others in their communities. Wilkinson & Pickett found that using a measure of trust (International data on trust from the European and World Values Survey), that the differences between countries were large. If you look at the chart you will see a cluster of Scandinavian countries and the Netherlands which score high on levels of trust. This group of countries also appears to be ‘Low’ in ‘Income Inequality’. As a group they register at levels of trust between 60 and 80% of people agreeing that others can be trusted. The U.S.A. registers on the other side of the chart at only 40% of the people agreeing that others can be trusted. The U.S.A. also scored ‘High’ on ‘Income inequality’. For review, here is a chart comparing modern ‘democracies’ for their level of income inequality:
The U.S.A. is second from the bottom with a more than eight times richer top 20% than the poorest 20%. Again, note the cluster of Scandinavian countries at the most equal top of the chart (the smallest income gap). Japan is the most equal in incomes, with a ratio of slightly more than three times greater incomes for their top 20%.
The quality of social relations is much lowered in high income inequality countries. “Inequality is divisive, and even small differences seem to make an important difference.” Even within the United States there are fourfold differences in trust levels between States.
You can see in the far upper left on the chart how North Dakota’s level of trust is between 60 and 70%. That places North Dakota at the same level of Sweden in the international chart. Mississippi shows that only 17% of the population believe that people can be trusted.
Racism.
The extreme example which the authors use to demonstrate the impact of income inequality on trust was that of the crisis of Hurricane Katrina and the racial discrimination against blacks in the subsequent days after the flooding:
Wilkinson & Pickett recognized that prejudice is corrosive and increases the impact of income inequality. Being excluded from educational and job opportunities further increases income inequality differences, then flowing into worse health and social outcomes. In introducing their evidence of the connection between income inequality and levels of social trust in communities, they cite the Katrina example of abandonment of poor, blacks in New Orleans as the breakdown of a flooded city, due to its extreme class and racial divisions. The prejudices on display when police suspected blacks of ‘looting’ and whites of ‘looking for food’ are given as definitions of inequality. The lack of empathy shown for victims of the flooding was a stunning display of racism and inequality. The authors make sure that the readers understand that racism is often the product of inequality and always involves dehumanization of the ‘other’. The exploitation of prison labor in American Gulags is an ongoing example of racism, dehumanization and extreme income inequality.
The authors ask how it must feel different to live in highly equal and highly unequal countries. (Of a thousand scenarios I picked out two for simplicity’s sake.)
Two scenarios.
Recently, I heard of a person with extreme chest pain who did not have insurance or Medicaid, who went to the ER, was not treated for their condition, was given inadequate diagnostic tests and billed for thousands of dollars without having received care. Had they lived in a more income equal country they would have received correct diagnostic procedures, correct treatment, and would not have been sent to a collection agency for predatory exploitation of their meager resources. Their care would have been unrelated to their finances. They would not have been ‘stabilized’ and released untreated in order to avoid the hospital providing care. If you are an American, and cannot afford health insurance, it is terrifying in the U.S. to get sick and to need medical care. In an income inequality country, people live in fear of their own natural human needs for medical care.
On the more equal end of the spectrum, imagine going on a camping trip in one income equal country, where the law permits campers to use all open spaces as community property for the purposes of camping. A camper could camp every night for free for as long as they wanted to (as long as they were considerate and did not interfere with the property owners activities or disrespect the environment by leaving garbage behind). That open community camping right could only exist where the social cohesion and civic engagement is high. Respect for others is expected and reciprocated in more equal countries where the majority of people see other people as just like themselves. Kind of like being with Occupy occupations.
Conversely, the predatory healthcare system in the first example can only exist where internationally respected human rights to medical care have been ignored and where healthcare has been commodified and exploited for profit.
Directionality: Inequality>Distrust.
In order to determine whether income inequality creates distrust or whether distrust creates income inequality, Rothstein & Uslaner showed that increases in inequality from 1960 to 1998 resulted in decreasing levels of trust in the U.S.A. from 60% to around 40%. Inequality increased, mutuality decreased; people felt like they were on their own; more silo-ing resulted in more reported distrust.
Income Inequality and Women’s Status.
As further proof that income inequality results in increases in social distance, the authors reported studies from the Institute for Women’s Policy Research which measures the status of women in the U.S.A.. The IWPR researchers established that in less income equal States, women’s status was lower. Those charts are not available to me, but they are published in The Spirit Level book. Where income inequality is the norm, women participate in politics less, make less than men do in income, and complete fewer college programs. Pickett & Wilkinson put together an international measure of women’s status, combining measures of income, education, and political office holding to render their own index: They found that in more income equal countries, women did much better.
Donations and Foreign Aid.
Individuals and nations who have high levels of trust appear to give more to others and to other nations. In a chart of the percent of national income spent on foreign aid, highly unequal countries spent much less on foreign aid than did their counterparts from highly equal countries. Highly income equal countries spent as much as 1 per cent of their national income (about five times as much as did the U.S.A.) on helping other nations.
Summing Up.
This post did not explore the other powerful issues of high homicide rates, much lower life expectancies, high imprisonment rates, and high rates of health problems which are also related to income inequality. Future posts will explore those issues. The validity of the connection between income inequality and health and social problems was argued here.
Income inequality brings a loss of trust and increases in social distance, deterioration of social cohesion, loss of civic engagement, reduced generosity toward others, reduced foreign aid between nations, lowering of women’s status, dehumanizing others, racism and class discrimination, and a sense of being on one’s own. The relationship appears to be one way: With an increase of income inequality, over time, trust is lost.
My apologies in advance for any errors in representing the ideas of the authors of The Spirit Level. For more information go to www.EqualityTrust.org.uk. You will find more evidence/research there which you can download and read.






36 Comments

TomThumb–
Thank you for another exceptional diary on economic fairness/justice.
I’ve heard Thom Hartmann mention the EqualityTrust website which you reference (that was, of course, before he moved to Washington DC, and became a shill for the Administration), and also recommend it to your readers.
Highly recommended.
Blue
Thanks Blue.
Another really good diary,Tom.
Income inequality…. seems to run,like a thread, through the “tapestry” of all the challenges we have before us that needs fixing.
Thank you, again.
Highly recommended
Thanks Walkinboots! Seems that way to me too.
I’d like to see a graph of diversity vs trust.
With all due respect to the authors of the study, I still that it’s not income inequality, but wealth inequality, that is the more important disparity. Consider that once one owns vast amount of capital, that capital makes more capital because those who own it, at least in this country, create the policies and tax code that pushes that doubling, trebling, whatever, of capital. The same folks make sure that there are virtually no regulations that impede their rent-seeking deals, or their extractive profiteering.
Anyhoo, great diary, great series, TomThumb.
It is a privilege to have you and others read this. The language is so restrained. You are right. The researchers talk about the impossible standards for competition with others as a part of “affluenza”, but your words capture a different violence that is being done to us. I think the authors wrote their book before Occupy and the lifting of the curtain/removal of the halo from the Wall Street crooks. Jane’s post yesterday on the global pact to strip mine our country economically shows the extremity of their plundering. Your writing has shown how far they will go to silence dissent. It is a very dark time we live in. Thanks for reading, Wendy.
I also fear the income inequality, but you are correct that the wealth inequality is the greater problem that will lead the revolution. The rich would be wise to accept a 2% pr year wealth tax (on worldwide wealth but less credits for any wealth tax paid to other countries).
Yep, I’ve written a number of posts on the sick, thieving crap trade deals. They are devastating for our workers, the counter-parties workers and other citizens, and extend our military reach further.
Sad times, dark days. We must get the word out far and wide and resist; it’s all that’s left.
Stay strong, and love,
wd
Very pertinent early 21st century topic/sub topics … well presented TomThumb. Recommended
The framing of relevant data the three charts above put forth both simple and effective. Was interesting to see where my home state of WI ranked in the third chart and where USA and Singapore are in first chart.
Historical practice of human slaving and slavery seemed fully premised on/with the idea that a human life had little tangible worth other than what labor/value it could furnish towards slave owners goals or purposes. The pre-civil war American South illustrated very well during the 19th century the extreme practice of many having little or nothing so some could have great excess,ease of comfort and hold/exercise extensive control/privilege. 19th century practices of American industrial enterprises towards labor and indifference to Americans as humanbeings led to reform(s). Americans eventually even got around to better thinking and acting about/towards planet Earth. Yet here we are in this early 21st century watching these reforms and advances made weaker,made less effective or hollowed out in little and large ways.
It is knowable that today in America the top ten,five and one percent of Americans by measured income/household wealth control or direct a percentage of held and kept wealth that when charted readily shows a extreme lopsided distribution of held and kept American wealth. This presents ongoing eroding to equitable,more balanced American economic spread arounds,social and political culture and society. What Wall Street,Goldman Sachs and the House of Morgan stand for is not available to most Americans by design and intent. To choose/fail to see this state of affairs as being so post Enron or 2008 Meltdown is done on choice or with failure to see/understand what implications the three charts above point to and illustrate so well. The fates of the French Kings and Russian Czars two up front examples of possible endpoints.
Post WW2 American militarism has flourished only because of the deep rapacity it imposes on American national wealth. All Americans could/would have benefited much more if post WW2 American national wealth poured into American militarism had been directed towards shared public commons upgrades,civic splendor efforts and social/economic built outs that all Americans could access and use towards better lives.
It is doubtful the current global regimes for wealth gain,move around and who will let happen/do this cheaply,cheaper or cheapest while human and natural environments are contaminated,wrecked and ruthlessly ruined will change anytime soon. The three charts above in this MyFDL Diary TomThumb put up present good starting points for better understanding and towards knowing why. Distribution of human worth and wealth are based on choices made. Wise and moral choices have been/are rare.
Dya think.
Thanks for an insightful post. Agree with Wendy Davis about how it’s not just income disparity but wealth disparity.
I have no links or research to point to, but it is true that as one gains capital, ones wealth begins to increase.
I am an example of a 99%er who, by various life choices & circumstances, has been able to develop a “portfolio” shall we say, and I was watching my meagre but nifty “wealth” increase over the years. Then comes the crash of 2008 and kaboom! A lot of my “wealth” went up in smoke through no fault of my own. To add insult to injury, I then got the “pleasure” of bailing of the same rat fuckers who fucked me over & rippd me off.
I’m fine. I’m doing ok. I do what I can to spread my investments to make things a “secure” as possible, but as we all know, the fed has kept interest rates artifically low, and now one makes zilch on so-called “safe” investments, etc.
All to say that I think that either part of the *gaol* of the crash or very very delightful (to the 1%), but unintended, outcome of the crash was to put a certain segment of the 99% in their place… as in: don’t get too big for your britches, bitches, cuz what you earn with one hand, we can take away in a blink of an eye.
Talk about lack of trust!! Talk about real inequality!!! I have next to no power in this game, and I’m truly one of the “lucky” ones. Yet I’m still ground under like all the rest, and my pocket is available to be picked at any moment.
The 1% want us all to feel scared and not trusting anyone bc then we’re more easily manipulated.
The rightwing sock puppets who come here to lecture us about how we need to all “learn” to stand on our two feet and “earn” our way must have a big fat laugh at how fallaciously ridiculous they are.
Onwards into my busy day. Thanks.
Hey, time to jump on the Obama cult of personality train.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jd9xU8cw1JE&feature=youtu.be
Thank you for a good, insightful post loaded with facts. History has shown that income inequality, if unchecked, always leads to wealth inequality,which usually leads to social unrest. In America’s case, the CAUSE of this is capitalism itself, with its monomaniacal focus on more and quicker profits.
The fanatical, quasi-religious ideology of the “free market” that has dominated our governments and institutions is directly responsible for those facts you so clearly display. The trend can only be turned around after that ideology is completely discredited. Unfortunately, I don’t see that happening anytime soon so long as most people believe they have even a snowball’s chance in a hot hell of “succeeding” in this most unfair economic system.
Again, thanks for the info, Tom Thumb. Recc’d.
Social unrest in the U.S. is unlikely. The “people” have been co-opted, distracted, misinformed and rendered indifferent. They have been brainwashed into thinking that suffering and deprivation are nothing more than part of the “natural order”. They have been conditioned to believe resistance is futile.
Excuse me. Why isn’t it distrust>inequality?
We might also want to note that the high trust countries have a more homogenous population, and were at one time/are monarchies.
In addition, their tax system is less progressive than ours, as in everybody shares the bill more there, than we do here. (VAT)
Past that, inequality has nothing to do with anything. Taking away money from the rich, does nothing for the poor. The rich do not take anything from anyone. Income is not a zero sum game. The richest 1% could all retire tomorrow, with no effect on anyone’s life.
I understand that quite a few would like to live like Scandinavians, but you’ll have to go to Scandinavia for that. It isn’t happening here.
Did you catch Jimmy Kimmel’s line at the WHCD about Obama’s 2008 campaign? How everyone rallied around Obama with hopes of a better tomorrow.
Yes, thank you very much for this post, Mr. Thumb. I agree with others that it partners very effectively with Jane’s timely notification of the furtherance of economic entrapment around the Pacific, something I am very interested in, and from your world graph I see that New Zealand, my home country, is teetering right there in the middle, thanks to their eager acceptance of status as a gated community with enormous repercussions both for the native populace and for lower income folk there in general. It is just beginning for them, though it has been underway even under the Labour Government, the intrusions of wealth and economic dominance that changed that nation into an entrepreneur’s paradise. I am waiting to see when nuclear will be deemed okay down there – I do hope it never happens.
I had wanted to (but hadn’t the time) add to Jane’s excellent piece (this is why we come here) that I feared for the kiwis as well as for our own workers. These things aren’t one way robberies – the big monopolies are wreaking havoc both sides of the equation, and agribusiness is raising its ugly head down there on the little family farms I grew up with. Think Mexico. Did it as a nation profit from Nafta? Not if you think in terms of equality, of the life of the community as a whole.
I am much afraid for my native land.
Shooter242,
Your rationalization of the correlation doesn’t make sense to me. You say it is a result of homogeneous populations, current/former monarchies and less progressive tax systems.
Yet the same correlation holds true when it is compiled on a state by state basis within the US. Can you address that.
There’s another factor that I think is reflected on both graphs but has been left out of the ‘trust’ equation. It isn’t just income inequality which determines trust – there is also quality of life as determined by environmental conditions, crowding, ability to get to stores for food, entertainment, health, etc.
I notice that New Mexico isn’t on the state graph, and I was wondering where it would fit. We have some very rich people here, but also we have indigenous populations and low income folk who like me are doing okay as far as quality of life is concerned, although extreme poverty also exists. Many areas where that is the case, the communities want to keep the lifestyle they have, which wouldn’t be the case in urban ghettos.
I noticed New Zealand is midpoint on the top graph, though the second one shows that it is right up there with the big rich guys as far as the richest 20 percent. Quality of life would be a huge factor. it’s my belief New Zealanders in general haven’t yet woken up to the situation the way US citizens have.
I think you’re just plain wrong. For one thing, it’s already started with the Occupy movement. But there were people like you in England in 1630, France in 1779, and Russia in 1900. They all believed that “it can’t happen here,” and all had a whole host of reasons to back up that belief.
And some of those same people later became revolutionaries themselves.
VAT is “progressive?” Here, hand me some of what you’ve been drinking.
Yes, I agree, Ohio Barbarian. Last night I was fortunate to hear Alternative Radio’s David Barsamian interview Gar Alperovitz on the revision of his book “America Beyond Capitalism” and he made exactly the same points you were making yesterday – absolutely wonderful what he said about the Cleveland area.
It is already begun – he calls it “the pre-history of the transformation.” Very exciting interview pointing out how many transformative activities are already underway.
Also to your second point, it was the Revolutionary practice to forgive former Royalists – at least they did not do a bloody purge the way it happened in France and Russia. That is worth remembering; that is our tradition, so don’t be afraid, our royalists, we will treat you fairly, not the way you have treated us (though there might be some frogmarching, just a tad.)
The horrendous economic inequality in America- and thus immensely different requirements from government is the raison d’être for Fox News and all the right-wing noisey/nosy bullies. They must relay the impression that the majority of Americans are ultra- conservative. Dividing Americans on false political dogma is necessary because an American motto has always been Majority Rules. For more than one hundred years, the American government could rationalize a fake Majority Rules by simply not including Native Americans, African Americans and women. Though still a reliable rabble rousing cry for the stupid and sociopaths among us it has become less ineffective. Gender hatred has also limited appeal now.The greatest fear among most of the economic ruling class is that Americans would remember an elemental fact: the 1% is not the majority. Ultra-conservatives are not the majority. Thus the camouflage chorus that divides the 99% in old & new superficial ways over and over again.
* Looking at the chart the high trust areas are north and west, diminishing to the east and south. More homogeneous to less homogenous.
* I make the point about monarchies, because if a nation historically has all benefits coming from a central source, it’s easier to have socialism.
* The point about taxation is that all classes there share the same taxes and benefits. Here the rich are expected to pay, while being means tested out of the benefits they are paying for.
Without a substantial amount of trust, relationships work well.
Drat. Without a substantial amount of trust, relationships don’t work well. Including economic ones.
Thanks for all of your comments and for reading the post. I thought I would add a couple of points which might place the post in a larger framework:
Please click on the highlighted texts for charts: The Health Impacts of inequality are shown within unequal societies and not in comparison to other countries. Health impacts follow a social gradient from low-income to high-income within each country. The chart shows the social gradient on the right and the graph on the left shows how health outcomes are not related to national average incomes. (In this chart LE or Life Expectancy is the health measure on the y axis.)
The amount of the inequality is the ‘gapiness’ between income groups expressed as a ratio of the incomes of the top 20% earners and the lowest 20% earners/lowest income quintile. The factor most closely related to an frequency Index of Health and Social Problems is Income Inequality. See this chart. As income inequality increases, the number of reported health and social problems increases too.
I apologize for not being able to respond to all of your individual comments. It is a bit overwhelming. Maybe it is a good thing that issues of equality evoke a good response.
I am overwhelmed also by enthusiasm as I think that we are on the cusp of turning our knowledge into social change.
This morning, I started reading abstracts about the biological impacts of social stress, in preparation for writing about income inequality and mental health, drug abuse, physical illnesses and social status. The work that has been done on this points to inconvenient realities about how destructive our current society is and how there is no point in trying to adapt to a failed system.
We must build a new, more equitable society.
Bluetoe2–
I agree with your sentiment that “social unrest” is not likely at this time. and mostly for the same reasons that you cite.
However, I believe that eventually–say several years after the “Grand Bargain” is struck, when there’s been a substantial period of time for “the People” to realize that our society has been forever changed–as we see millions of seniors plunged into poverty due to draconian cuts to social security (cuts that equal as much as one-third of a monthly social security benefit check), more and more students plunged into mountains of college debt, further deterioration of our “corporate-style” healthcare system (yes, I’m referring to ObamaCare, further cuts to Medicare and Medicaid), etc., the idea of social unrest may actually begin to fester in the US. (Apologize for the run-on sentence!).
But by then, the police state will be so ensconced, it won’t make any difference. Think “Occupy Movements,” and the systemic dismantling of them.
I believe that the main reason that so many Democratic mayors jumped on board to kill the movement, was that they wanted to co-opt any opposition to, and protests against, President Obama’s “Grand Bargain.” After all, video footage of tens of thousands of protesters in the streets rallying against his “bargain” would not have served his reelection campaign very well.
Blue
That’s a noble sentiment, but rather than “building”, it usually involves tearing down. I imagine Stalin, Mao, and Pol Pot said much the same things.
Yeah, people say all kinds of stuff.
“…that all men are created equal..”
“…in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity…”
“…that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”
You really are a royal prick, aren’t you?
Ah, he’s just the local troll from Conservative Cave. Try to think of him as an unruly pet.
Thank you again, Tom Thumb, for this presentation. I also think that we are on the cusp of a transformation that may indeed happen more quickly than we suppose. Someone has said “All great revolutions look impossible before they happen,” so I think that the pessimists merely prove that point. As has been pointed out on these forums, Occupy is not over, and what is to be gained by being pessimistic in any case? It is merely a great excuse to do nothing, or to keep doing what you did in the past to contribute to the current malaise.
Recommended. Best diary of the day, in my opinion.
Thanks for writing Juliania.
Vaclav Havel wrote that change will come when everyone arrives at a common perception, that how things are, needs to change.
The Power of the Powerless, by Vaclav Havel. (online)