How economic inequality harms societies | Richard Wilkinson (2)
Interestingly,
some parallel work going on in social psychology:
some people reviewed 208 different studies
in which volunteers had been invited
into a psychological laboratory
and had their stress hormones,
their responses to doing stressful tasks, measured.
And in the review,
what they were interested in seeing
is what kind of stresses
most reliably raise levels of cortisol,
the central stress hormone.
And the conclusion was
it was tasks that included social-evaluative threat --
threats to self-esteem or social status
in which others can negatively judge your performance.
Those kind of stresses
have a very particular effect
on the physiology of stress.
Now we have been criticized.
Of course, there are people who dislike this stuff
and people who find it very surprising.
I should tell you though
that when people criticize us for picking and choosing data,
we never pick and choose data.
We have an absolute rule
that if our data source has data for one of the countries we're looking at,
it goes into the analysis.
Our data source decides
whether it's reliable data,
we don't.
Otherwise that would introduce bias.
What about other countries?
There are 200 studies
of health in relation to income and equality
in the academic peer-reviewed journals.
This isn't confined to these countries here,
hiding a very simple demonstration.
The same countries,
the same measure of inequality,
one problem after another.
Why don't we control for other factors?
Well we've shown you that GNP per capita
doesn't make any difference.
And of course, others using more sophisticated methods in the literature
have controlled for poverty and education
and so on.
What about causality?
Correlation in itself doesn't prove causality.
We spend a good bit of time.
And indeed, people know the causal links quite well
in some of these outcomes.
The big change in our understanding
of drivers of chronic health
in the rich developed world
is how important chronic stress from social sources
is affecting the immune system,
the cardiovascular system.
Or for instance, the reason why violence
becomes more common in more unequal societies
is because people are sensitive to being looked down on.
I should say that to deal with this,
we've got to deal with the post-tax things
and the pre-tax things.
We've got to constrain income,
the bonus culture incomes at the top.
I think we must make our bosses accountable to their employees
in any way we can.
I think the take-home message though
is that we can improve the real quality of human life
by reducing the differences in incomes between us.
Suddenly we have a handle
on the psychosocial well-being of whole societies,
and that's exciting.
Thank you.
(Applause)