Yorkshire Post

Academics highlight problems caused by long-term inequality

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A TEAM of experts from a Yorkshire university say the world’s collective failure to reverse inequality is at the heart of a global malaise covering a number of factors from populism to climate change.

Academics at the University of York have had their work on the subject published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ),

Professors Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson say societies with bigger income difference­s tend to have poorer physical and mental health, higher levels of illicit drug use and obesity.

Increasing­ly unequal societies are also marked by more violence, weaker community life and less trust. Other global risks stemming from inequality range from ‘fiscal crises’ to ‘profound social instabilit­y’, increasing the polarisati­on of societies and national sentiment.

As inequality drives consumeris­m and over-consumptio­n, it also contribute­s to a changing climate and ‘degrading environmen­ts’.

Yet despite decades of research showing that we need to tackle these structural determinan­ts if we want to reduce inequaliti­es, inaction prevails and therefore health inequaliti­es remain undiminish­ed.

Prof Pickett, professor of epidemiolo­gy in York’s department of health sciences and the University’s research champion for justice and equality, said: “In many cities in the UK and USA, we continue to see life expectancy gaps of five to 10 years – and occasional­ly of 15 to 20 years – between the richest and poorest areas.

“The long term failure, even of ostensibly progressiv­e government­s, to tackle these glaring injustices is perhaps one of the reasons why public opinion has swung so strongly away from the establishe­d political parties.

She added: “The public’s sense of being left behind will only exacerbate the negative health effects of austerity, which are starting to emerge in our health statistics.”

 ??  ?? PROF KATE PICKETT: York University’s research champion for justice and equality.
PROF KATE PICKETT: York University’s research champion for justice and equality.

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