Literary Hub

Walter Scheidel: We Need to Worry About Inequality Now More Than Ever

The coronavirus pandemic is dramatically disrupting not only our daily lives but society itself. This show features conversations with some of the world’s leading thinkers and writers about the deeper economic, political, and technological consequences of the pandemic. It’s our new daily podcast trying to make longterm sense out of the chaos of today’s global crisis.

On today’s episode, Walter Scheidel, author of The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century, discusses what history can teach us about inequality.

From the episode:

Walter Scheidel: I’m not sure if any system is going to reduce inequality right now, but what is going to happen? My thing is that existing differences between countries in terms of levels of inequality may actually persist throughout this crisis and beyond. You’ve already seen in some European countries having instituted more generous measures than the United States, helping workers and small businesses more effectively survive this, and come out halfway through a chip at the other end. And so you would expect Europe to end up with perhaps temporarily somewhat higher levels of inequality because no government is able to absorb the entire shock.

Article continues after advertisement

But you would always expect the US to retain the high levels of polarization, of inequality, that we have now experienced for quite some time, because the current interventions are really short-term fixes, instead designed to keep everything afloat but preserve the established order of the existing finance system and the corporate system, just keeping everybody afloat for as long as it takes and then go back to more or less business as usual. There is a pretty good chance that this might work just the way it worked after the financial crisis in 2008. I guess the irony is that the people dying in today’s pandemic are people who generally don’t work. It’s the older, it’s the infirm, it’s the sick.

*
Subscribe now on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever else you find your podcasts!

________________________________

Walter Scheidel is the Dickason Professor in the Humanities, Professor of Classics and History, and a Kennedy-Grossman Fellow in Human Biology at Stanford University. The author or editor of seventeen previous books, he has published widely on premodern social and economic history, demography, and comparative history. He lives in Palo Alto, California.

More from Literary Hub

Literary Hub13 min readPsychology
On Struggling With Drug Addiction And The System Of Incarceration
There is a lie, thin as paper, folded between every layer of the criminal justice system, that says you deserve whatever happens to you in the system, because you belong there. Every human at the helm of every station needs to believe it—judge, attor
Literary Hub13 min read
Real Talk: On Claudia Rankine’s Painful Conversations with Whiteness
Three quarters of the way through Just Us: An American Conversation, Claudia Rankine considers three different understandings of the word “conversation.” The first, from a Latinx artist (unnamed) discussing her reluctance to play oppression Olympics
Literary Hub8 min read
On Cairns, Hoodoos, and Monoliths: What Happens in the Desert Shouldn’t Always Stay in the Desert
You cannot walk straight through the Utah desert. “Start across the country in southeastern Utah almost anywhere and you are confronted by a chasm too steep and too deep to climb down through, and just too wide to jump,” Wallace Stegner wrote in Morm

Related Books & Audiobooks