Sunday, January 10, 2016
Why are some Countries Better than Others? A Look at Size, Income, Crime and Longevity_Part One
by Tom Kando
Today I start publishing a somewhat academic yet hopefully interesting article. Due to its length, I must split it into four segments.
Abstract:
This article attempts to show that country SIZE (population) , as an independent variable, can predict quality of life. That is, smaller countries enjoy a better quality of life than larger countries. The dependent variable - quality of life - is operationalized through three indicators: per capita GDP, the murder rate, and life expectancy. It is shown that smaller countries indeed enjoy higher per capita income, lower murder rates, and longer life expectancy. Correlations between the three dependent variables are also examined: As expected, the relationship between per capita GDP and life expectancy is positive, and the relationship between the murder rate and life expectancy is negative. However, the relationship between per capita GDP and the murder rate turned out to be POSITIVE, which came as a surprise.
This study is largely descriptive, not explanatory. While I offer a few explanations, my aim is not to provide a detailed causal analysis. The relationships I examine are quite possibly spurious. They are certainly part of a much more complex set of variables, including political, cultural and geographical factors. However, these data offer a global view of how four major variables interact.
Introduction:
Every time I travel, I am struck by the differences in the QUALITY OF LIFE and THE STANDARD OF LIVING of various countries. People live healthier, longer, happier, more crime-free and more affluent lives in some countries than others. What accounts for these differences is probably the single most complicated and important political question for humanity.
The obvious - and of course largely true - cliché is that it all boils down to economics. People who live in better-off countries are happier and healthier than those who live in poor countries. The contrast between the West and the Third World is clear.
However, whenever I travel, I am struck by the many exceptions to this simplistic generalization. It begins with the United States and Europe. Many Western European countries enjoy, I am afraid, better quality of life than does America. And then, when you travel WITHIN Europe it seems that life is better, for example, in countries such as Switzerland, the Netherlands, the rest of the Benelux, Denmark and the other Scandinavian countries, than it is in France, Britain, Italy and Spain, among others.
One thing the US, France, Britain, Italy and Spain have in common: They are relatively LARGE (and America of course is HUGE). Their populations range from thirty-three million to three hundred and twenty million.
One thing Switzerland, the Benelux and the Scandinavian countries have in common: They are SMALL: Their populations range from ninety two thousand to less than seventeen million.
For years, I have carried the impressionistic hypothesis in my head, that - by and large - small countries generally work better than large countries. This was confirmed again this year, when I paid my first visit to Ireland, a country of four million people - fewer than the San Francisco Bay area. The people are friendly, happy and healthy; the country is spic and span and crime-free; I saw no homeless beggars in the streets of Dublin. A wonderful place (except the weather, perhaps). Thus, one variable which has intrigued me for a long time is simply countries’ SIZE. I finally decided to go beyond my anecdotal experience, and try to test my hypothesis with some actual numbers - are small countries “better” countries?
Of course, any worthwhile sociological research is multi-variate. Life is multi-variate. Were I to try to present the present article at a meeting of the American Sociological Association, I would be laughed out of the office. But that is not my intent. I just want to explore a simple idea, and inform as well as entertain the readers with some interesting facts.
I recently published an article, “Demography is Destiny: An Essay on the Primary Correlate of Violence.” (See International Journal on World Peace, June, 2015). In that article, I attempt to show that when comparing international rates of violence from country to country, age is a very strong correlate at the aggregate level of entire countries. I looked at just this ONE independent variable.
In the present article, my unit of analysis is once again the COUNTRY, not the individual, and my primary focus is on one independent variable again - country SIZE (population). For a ranking of the world’s countries, I used the following source: Countries of the World, Ranked by Population.
My dependent variable is “Quality of life,” here operationalized only through three factors:
(1) income, as a rough measure of standard of living,
(2) murder rate and
(3) life expectancy.
Obviously, the determinants and components of “quality of life” are innumerable and widely researched. However, my aim here is purely an exploratory effort to find out whether there is a relationship between countries’ size and their quality of life, as has been apparent to me whenever I travel around the world.
In other words, my working hypothesis is:
Smaller countries tend to provide their citizens with
(1) a higher standard of living,
(2) greater safety from being murdered and
(3) a longer life.
I subdivide this hypothesis into six sub-hypotheses:
1. Smaller countries tend to be more affluent than larger countries.
2. Smaller countries have lower murder rates than larger countries.
3. Smaller countries enjoy a longer life expectancy than larger countries.
4. Richer countries have lower murder rates than poorer countries.
5. Richer countries enjoy longer life expectancy than poorer countries.
6. Countries with a high murder rate have a lower life expectancy than countries with a low murder rate.
Methodological Issues: Mean vs. Median and Individual vs. Household
(To be continued)
© Tom Kando 2015
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4 comments:
I want to win the lottery and move to Switzerland!
Tom, I like your work because it is the type of work I believe more sociologists need to be doing. Instead of promoting value relativism, you look at valued outcomes and make scientific correlations. Of course societies, like the weather, are complex models and the work you are doing with single dependent variables is a bit like weather forecasting in the 1950s, opposed the the weather forecasting today where over the years hundreds of variables have been input in to computers, making the predictive power more accurate. But I say BRAVO for pushing toward functionalism in the field of sociology.
That said, I have a couple of questions / comments.
1. By "size" you are referring to population rather than land area. However, further studies might show that both excessively sparse or overpopulated areas might have lower qualities of life and there may be some ideal range of population density for the highest qualities of life.
2. In the U.S. the states are more like European states, and the federal government like the European union even though the US claims to be a "nation." One might argue (a) populations above a certain size may not be able to function as nations, and that "nations" provide greater qualities of life because they can better foster social solidarity and common values.
3. This part of your article seems to support my long running thesis that the U.S. should be decentralized and have state collect the income taxes and compete with one another to provide better alternative living environments that people can voluntarily move to.
Yes. Population is of course far more relevant than land area - Australia, Canada and Russia have very large surfaces, but that doesn’t make them world powers.
As to your hypothesis - it’s intriguing: Australia and Canada have high quality of life, Russia does not...So I’m not sure. Similarly, some countries with very high population density (e.g. Holland, Japan) are doing great, but other ones (BanglaDesh, etc) are not...
I like your last point - I know: you have always been a Jeffersonian, and not a Hamiltonian...
Tom
always enjoy your thoughts, Tom B. may be home in a week.
peace.
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