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Transcript of How Economic Inequality Harms Societies: Richard Wilkinson

Read the full transcript of British epidemiologist Richard Wilkinson’s talk titled “How Economic Inequality Harms Societies” at TED Talks 2011 conference. In this illuminating talk, he explores the profound societal impacts of economic inequality. Drawing on extensive research and comparative data, Wilkinson demonstrates how inequality affects virtually every aspect of social well-being.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Inequality Paradox

RICHARD WILKINSON: You all know the truth of what I’m going to say. I think the intuition that inequality is divisive and socially corrosive has been around since before the French Revolution. What’s changed is we now can look at the evidence, we can compare societies, more and less equal societies, and see what inequality does. I’m going to take you through that data and then explain why the links that I think I’m going to be showing you exist. But first, see what a miserable lot we are.

I want to start, though, with a paradox. This shows you life expectancy against gross national income, how rich countries are on average. And you see the countries on the right, like Norway and the USA, are twice as rich as Israel, Greece, Portugal on the left. And it makes no difference to their life expectancy at all. There’s no suggestion of a relationship there. But if we look within our societies, there are extraordinary social gradients in health running right across society.

This again is life expectancy. These are small areas of England and Wales, the poorest on the right, the richest on the left. Not a difference between the poor and the rest of us. Even the people just below the top have less good health than the people at the top. So income means something very important within our societies, and nothing between them. The explanation of that paradox is that within our societies we’re looking at relative income, or social position, social status, where we are in relation to each other, and the size of the gaps between us.

Measuring Inequality Across Nations

And as soon as you’ve got that idea, you should immediately wonder, what happens if we widen the differences, or compress them, make the income differences bigger or smaller? And that’s what I’m going to show you. I’m not using any hypothetical data, I’m taking data from the UN, it’s the same as the World Bank has, on the scale of income differences in these rich developed market democracies.

The measure we’ve used, just because it’s easy to understand and you can download it, is how much richer the top 20% than the bottom 20% in each country. And you see in the more equal countries, on the left, Japan, Finland, Norway, Sweden, the top 20% are about three and a half, four times as rich as the bottom 20%. But at the more unequal end, UK, Portugal, USA, Singapore, the differences are twice as big. On that measure we are twice as unequal as some of the other successful market democracies.

The Social Impact of Inequality

Now I’m going to show you what that does to our societies. We collected data on problems with social gradients, the kind of problems that are more common at the bottom of the social ladder. Internationally comparable data on life expectancy, on kids’ math and literacy scores, on infant mortality rates, homicide rates, proportion of the population in prison, teenage birth rates, levels of trust, obesity, mental illness, which in the standard diagnostic classification includes drug and alcohol addiction, and social mobility.

We put them here all in one index. They’re all weighted equally. Where a country is, is sort of average score on these things. And there you see it in relation to the measure of inequality I’ve just shown you, which I shall use over and over again in the data. The more unequal countries doing worse on all these kinds of social problems. It’s an extraordinarily close correlation. But if you look at that same index of health and social problems in relation to GNP per capita, gross national income, there’s nothing there. No correlation anymore.

The average well-being of our societies is not dependent any longer on national income and economic growth. That’s very important in poorer countries, but not in the rich developed world. But the differences between us and where we are in relation to each other now matter very much.

Child Well-being and Inequality

We were a little bit worried that people might think we’d been choosing problems to suit our argument and just manufactured this evidence. So we also looked in, we did a paper in the British Medical Journal on the UNICEF index of child well-being. It has 40 different components put together by other people. It contains whether kids can talk to their parents, whether they have books at home, what immunization rates are like, whether there’s bullying at school. Everything goes into it.

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Here it is in relation to that same measure of inequality. Kids doing worse in the more unequal societies. Highly significant relationship. But once again, if you look at that measure of child well-being in relation to national income per person, there’s no relationship. No suggestion of a relationship.

Trust and Social Capital

I’m going to show you some of the separate bits of our index. Here, for instance, is trust. It’s simply the proportion of the population who agree most people can be trusted. Comes from the World Value Survey. You see at the more unequal end, it’s about 15% of the population who feel they can trust others. But in the more equal societies, it rises to 60 or 65%. And if you look at measures of involvement in community life, or social capital, very similar relationships, closely related to inequality.

I may say we did all this work twice. We did it first on these rich developed countries, and then as a separate test bed, we repeated it all on the 50 American states. It’s asking just the same question. Do the more unequal states do worse on all these kinds of measures?