Publication year: 2011
Source: Social Science & Medicine, In Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available online 12 May 2011
Robert, de Vries , Samuel, Gosling , Jeff, Potter
Richard Wilkinson’s ‘inequality hypothesis’ describes the relationship between societal income inequality and population health in terms of the corrosive psychosocial effects of social hierarchy. An explicit component of this hypothesis is that inequality should lead individuals to become more competitive and self-focused, less friendly and altruistic. Together these traits are a close conceptual match to the opposing poles of the Big Five personality factor of Agreeableness; a widely used concept in the field of personality psychology. Based on this fact, we predicted that individuals living in more economically unequal U.S. states should be lower in Agreeableness than those living in…
Highlights: ► Psycho-social explanations of the link between society-level income inequality and individual health predict that people’s social perceptions and attitudes should be altered by inequality. ► This study is in line with that prediction. People living in more economically unequal U.S. states tend to be less Agreeable. ► This study provides novel support for the psycho-social mechanisms proposed to underlie the association between income inequality and health