Sometimes ‘poor little rich kids’ really are poor little rich kids
Wealth inequality is a massive social problem. Not only for the poor but also for the rich.
http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2016/01/05/sometimes-poor-little-rich-kids-really-are-poor-little-rich-kids/
The affluenza defense of Ethan Couch, a 16-year-old Texas boy who killed four pedestrians while driving drunk, has received a great deal of ridicule, much of it justified. That said, it would be foolish to allow an absurd effort to minimize one teenagers responsibility for a horrific tragedy to obscure growing evidence that we have a significant and growing crisis on our hands. The children of the affluent are becoming increasingly troubled, reckless, and self-destructive. Perhaps we neednt feel sorry for these poor little rich kids. But if we dont do something about their problems, they will become everyones problems.
One of us has spent about 20 years studying and documenting the growth of dysfunction among affluent youth, and the other has written about one large source of the problem. High-risk behavior, including extreme substance abuse and promiscuous sex, is growing fast among young people from communities dominated by white-collar, well-educated parents. These kids attend schools distinguished by rich academic curricula, high standardized test scores, and diverse extracurricular opportunities. Their parents annual income, at $150,000 and more, is well over twice the national average. And yet they show serious levels of maladjustment as teens, displaying problems that tend to begin as they enter adolescence and get worse as they approach college.
What kinds of problems? First, marijuana and alcohol abuse, including binge drinking. Studies show that drug and alcohol use is higher among affluent teens than their inner-city counterparts. And surveys have revealed that full-time college students are two and a half times more likely to experience substance abuse or dependence than members of the general population. Half of all full-time college students reported binge drinking and abuse of illegal or prescription drugs.
...
Finally, there is a psychological toll. The proportion of affluent youth indicating serious levels of depression or anxiety is two to three times national rates, and levels of eating disorders and self-injurious behaviors far exceed national averages.
valerief
(53,235 posts)Igel
(35,191 posts)A lot of times we act like money is a proxy for happiness and lack of money is a proxy for stress.
They're different kinds of things. As proxies, they yield politically useful conclusions, but when you actually start checking on things like stress hormone levels and measures of psychological well-being or even just happiness the usefulness of money as a proxy for anything other than income fails pretty quickly.
There are studies showing that money yields happiness and poverty yields stress, but these are usually extrapolated far beyond what's real.
valerief
(53,235 posts)lumberjack_jeff
(33,224 posts)...with less inequality.
Katashi_itto
(10,175 posts)T
Midnight Writer
(21,540 posts)A rich kid with a drug problem goes to rehab. A poor kid goes to prison.
A rich kid with depression gets treatment. A poor kid lives with it.
A rich kid who kills four people in a drunk driving rampage gets probation. A poor kid gets multiple homicide and life in prison.
A rich kid who makes a horrendously bad decision gets a second, third, fourth chance. A poor kid is screwed for the rest of his life.