A Plutocracy Ruled by Self-Centered Jerks?
http://billmoyers.com/2013/08/27/a-plutocracy-ruled-by-self-centered-jerks/
August
27, 2013
Hassan
Nemazee, the wealthy Manhattan investment banker, steps over a security chain
as he leaves federal court in Manhattan after being sentenced to 12 years in
prison for bank fraud. (AP Photo/Larry Neumeister)
Two
studies released last week confirmed what most of us already knew: the
ultra-wealthy tend to be narcissistic and have a greater sense of entitlement
than the rest of us, and Congress only pays attention to their interests. Both
studies are consistent with earlier research.
In
the first study,
published in the current Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin,
Paul Piff of UC Berkeley conducted five experiments which demonstrated that
“higher social class is associated with increased entitlement and narcissism.”
Given the opportunity, Piff also found that they were more likely to check
themselves out in a mirror than were those of lesser means.
Piff
looked at how participants scored on a standard scale of “psychological
entitlement,” and found that those of a high social class — based on income
levels, education and occupational prestige — were more likely to say “I
honestly feel I’m just more deserving than others,” while people further down
the social ladder were likelier to respond, “I do not necessarily deserve
special treatment.”
In
an earlier study, published last year in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, Piff and four researchers from the University
of Toronto conducted a series of experiments which found that “upper-class
individuals behave more unethically than lower-class individuals.” This
included being more likely to “display unethical decision-making,” steal, lie
during a negotiation and cheat in order to win a contest.
In
one telling experiment, the researchers observed a busy intersection, and found
that drivers of luxury cars were more likely to cut off other drivers and less
likely to stop for pedestrians crossing the street than those behind the wheels
of more modest vehicles. “In our crosswalk study, none of the cars in the
beater-car category drove through the crosswalk,” Piff told The New York
Times. “But you see this huge boost in a driver’s likelihood to
commit infractions in more expensive cars.” He added: “BMW drivers are the
worst.”
Summing
up previous research on the topic, Piff notes that upper-class individuals also
“showed reduced sensitivity to others’ suffering” as compared with working- and
middle-class people.
Lower-class
individuals are more likely to spend time taking care of others, and they are
more embedded in social networks that depend on mutual aid. By contrast,
upper-class individuals prioritize independence from others: They are less
motivated than lower-class individuals to build social relationships and
instead seek to differentiate themselves from others.
These
findings may appear to represent a bit of psychological trivia, but a study to be published in Political Science Quarterly by
Thomas Hayes, a scholar at Trinity University, finds that U.S. senators respond
almost exclusively to the interests of their wealthiest constituents – those
more likely to be unethical and less sensitive to the suffering of others,
according to Piff.
Hayes
took data from the Annenberg Election Survey — a massive database of public
opinion representing the views of 90,000 voters — and compared them with their
senators’ voting records from 2001 through 2010. From 2007 through 2010, U.S.
senators were somewhat responsive to the interests of the middle class, but
hadn’t been for the first 6 years Hayes studied. The views of the poor didn’t
factor into legislators’ voting tendencies at all.
As
Eric Dolan noted for The Raw Story, “The neglect of lower income
groups was a bipartisan affair. Democrats were not any more responsive to the
poor than Republicans.” Hayes wrote that his analysis “suggests oligarchic
tendencies in the American system, a finding echoed in other research.”
Hayes’
study is consistent with earlier research, including Princeton University
scholar Larry Bartels’ 2005 study
of “Economic Inequality and Political Representation.”
There
are a few of ways of looking at these findings. They could be the result of
genuinely held ideological beliefs which happen to justify inequality and
privilege.
According
to OpenSecrets,
the average net worth of senators in 2011 was $11.9 million, so it could be a
matter of legislators advancing their own interests and those of the people
with whom they socialize and associate.
But
MIT economist Daron Acemoglu, who co-authored Why Nations
Fail with Harvard’s James Robinson, says that this kind
of political inequality is a product of widening economic disparities. “It’s a
general pattern throughout history,” he told Think
Progress. “When economic inequality increases, the people who have
become economically more powerful will often attempt to use that power in order
to gain even more political power. And once they are able to monopolize
political power, they will start using that for changing the rules in their
favor. And that sort of political inequality is the real danger that’s facing
the United States.”
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