America’s self-destructive whites. By Fareed Zakaria. Washington Post, December 31, 2015.
Zakaria:
Why is Middle America killing itself? The fact itself is probably the most important social science finding in years. It is already reshaping American politics. The Post’s Jeff Guo notes that the people who make up this cohort are “largely responsible for Donald Trump’s lead in the race for the Republican nomination for president.” The key question is why, and exploring it provides answers that suggest that the rage dominating U.S. politics will only get worse.
Why is Middle America killing itself? The fact itself is probably the most important social science finding in years. It is already reshaping American politics. The Post’s Jeff Guo notes that the people who make up this cohort are “largely responsible for Donald Trump’s lead in the race for the Republican nomination for president.” The key question is why, and exploring it provides answers that suggest that the rage dominating U.S. politics will only get worse.
For
decades, people in rich countries have lived longer. But in a well-known paper,
economists Angus Deaton and Anne Case found that over the past 15 years, one
group — middle-age whites in the United States — constitutes an alarming trend.
They are dying in increasing numbers. And things look much worse for those with
just a high school diploma or less. There are concerns about the calculations,
but even a leading critic of the paper has acknowledged that, however measured,
“the change compared to other countries and groups is huge.”
The
main causes of death are as striking as the fact itself: suicide, alcoholism,
and overdoses of prescription and illegal drugs. “People seem to be killing
themselves, slowly or quickly,” Deaton told me. These circumstances are usually
caused by stress, depression and despair. The only comparable spike in deaths
in an industrialized country took place among Russian males after the collapse
of the Soviet Union, when rates of alcoholism skyrocketed.
A
conventional explanation for this middle-class stress and anxiety is that
globalization and technological change have placed increasing pressures on the
average worker in industrialized nations. But the trend is absent in any other
Western country — it’s an exclusively American phenomenon. And the United
States is actually relatively insulated from the pressures of globalization,
having a vast, self-contained internal market. Trade makes up only 23 percent
of the U.S. economy, compared with 71 percent in Germany and 45 percent in
France.
Deaton
speculated to me that perhaps Europe’s more generous welfare state might ease
some of the fears associated with the rapid change. Certainly he believes that
in the United States, doctors and drug companies are far too eager to deal with
physical and psychological pain by prescribing drugs, including powerful and
addictive opioids. The introduction of drugs such as Oxycontin, a heroin-like
prescription painkiller, coincides with the rise in deaths.
But why
don’t we see the trend among other American ethnic groups? While mortality
rates for middle-age whites have stayed flat or risen, the rates for Hispanics
and blacks have continued to decline significantly. These groups live in the
same country and face greater economic pressures than whites. Why are they not
in similar despair?
The
answer might lie in expectations. Princeton anthropologist Carolyn Rouse
suggested, in an email exchange, that other groups might not expect that their
income, standard of living and social status are destined to steadily improve.
They don’t have the same confidence that if they work hard, they will surely
get ahead. In fact, Rouse said that after hundreds of years of slavery,
segregation and racism, blacks have developed ways to cope with disappointment
and the unfairness of life: through family, art, protest speech and, above all,
religion.
“You
have been the veterans of creative suffering,” Martin Luther King Jr. told
African Americans in his “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963: “Continue to work
with the faith that unearned suffering is redemptive.” Writing in 1960, King explained the issue in personal terms: “As my sufferings mounted I soon
realized that there were two ways that I could respond to my situation: either
to react with bitterness or seek to transform the suffering into a creative
force. . . . So
like the Apostle Paul I can now humbly yet proudly say, ‘I bear in my body the marks of the Lord
Jesus.’” The
Hispanic and immigrant experiences in the United States are different, of
course. But again, few in these groups have believed that their place in
society is assured. Minorities, by definition, are on the margins. They do not
assume that the system is set up for them. They try hard and hope to succeed,
but they do not expect it as the norm.
The
United States is going through a great power shift. Working-class whites don’t
think of themselves as an elite group. But, in a sense, they have been,
certainly compared with blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans and most
immigrants. They were central to America’s economy, its society, indeed its
very identity. They are not anymore. Donald Trump has promised that he will
change this and make them win again. But he can’t. No one can. And deep down,
they know it.