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Health & Wellness

The New Deal's Unsung Victory

By Sam Pizzigati, Too Much: A Commentary on Excess and Inequality. Posted April 3, 2008.


"Policies that produce more egalitarian societies may explain profound health improvements."
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Seventy-five years ago this March, major media outlets have reminded us over recent weeks, Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal had its American debut. But when exactly did the New Deal end? The American Journal of Public Health has just published a fascinating article that suggests a surprising answer.

FDR's New Dealers, the evidence in this piece helps establish, may have actually scored their biggest victory over inequality after Roosevelt died in 1945. And this landmark victory didn't even take place inside the United States. America's New Dealers had their last -- and most lasting -- egalitarian hurrah in Japan.

Japan's "New Deal" era began in 1945, right after the surrender that ended World War II. The public policy veterans of the Roosevelt administration who streamed into Japan that year, as staffers for the Allied Occupation run by General Douglas MacArthur, found not just a war-weary nation, but a deeply unequal one.

By 1952, the year the occupation ended, that gross inequality was fast disappearing. Japan would soon become one of the world's most equal -- and prosperous -- nations. By the late 1980s, World Bank statistics document, Japan would sport the world's smallest internal gaps in income distribution.

Stephen Bezruchka and Tsukasa Namekata of the University of Washington School of Public Health and the Oregon Health & Science University's Maria Gilson Sistrom tell the tale of this remarkable transformation in the current issue of the American Journal of Public Health.

What's an article about an economic story over half a century old doing in a professional health journal? The simple answer: Japan didn't just become more equal after World War II. Japan became incredibly more healthy.

In the half-century before World War II, a time when huge business conglomerates had come to concentrate Japan's growing industrial wealth within a narrow privileged class, average Japanese men lived just 42.8 years. By 1960, male life expectancy had registered a remarkable rise to 60.8 years, and Japanese women had seen their lifespans increase, on average, from 51.1 years to 64.8.

The top U.S. health official during the Allied occupation of Japan, note Bezruchka and his colleagues, would later call this "astounding jump" in life expectancy "unequaled in any country in the world in medical history in a comparable period of time."

Japan's lifespan gains would continue. By 1979, no people in the entire world lived any longer than the Japanese. The world's most equal and most healthy nations, in effect, had become one and the same.

A coincidence? Health analysts like Bezruchka, Namekata, and Sistrom don't think so -- and they strengthen their case for a link between inequality and health by exploring other possible explanations for Japan's post-World War II gains in life expectancy.

The Japanese, the three authors show, didn't become healthier because the Japanese health care system suddenly became world-class. It didn't. And Japan didn't jump to the top of the world lifespan rankings because Japanese families eat a wholesome Asian cuisine. Japanese eating habits have actually become more Westernized -- and less healthy -- since World War II.

Nor do individuals in Japan avoid unhealthy personal habits. Men in Japan smoke, for instance, at among the highest rates in the developed world.

So what's behind Japan's fabulously good health outcomes?

Japan's phenomenal health success reflects the importance of what analysts now call the "social determinants of health."

"Policies that produce more egalitarian societies," as the Bezruchka team puts it, "may explain profound health improvements."

These improvements most likely work their medical magic by reducing debilitating chronic stress. And this stress reduction owes far more to "political changes" than to "specific public health programs."

What "political changes"? The American occupiers of Japan came in committed to a set of priorities that would eventually be dubbed the "3 Ds": the demilitarization of Japanese society, the democratization of the nation's political process, and the decentralization of Japan's wealth and power.

To ensure that decentralization, the occupation broke up Japan's business empires, encouraged labor unions, implemented a mammoth land reform, and even legislated a maximum wage. American occupiers linked these policies to the cooperative spirit of Japan's Confucian past and "unlocked," in the process, indigenous social forces that continued to drive Japan in a more egalitarian direction long after the occupation ended.

"Japan's good health status today is not primarily the result of individual health behaviors or the country's health care system," Bezruchka, Namekata, and Sistrom sum up. "Rather, it is the result of the continuing economic equality that is the legacy of dismantling the prewar hierarchy."

In the United States, meanwhile, the New Deal drive to greater equality shifted into reverse in the 1970s and has been speeding backwards ever since. Americans have paid for that reversal. In 2004, according to U.N. data, the people of the United States ranked 30th in global life expectancy. The Japanese ranked first.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: health, japan, new deal, equality

Sam Pizzigati is the editor of the online weekly Too Much, and an associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies.

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Won't SEE this
Posted by: JSquercia on Apr 3, 2008 10:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bet you won't see THIS on the TV or in the Newspapers

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Good article
Posted by: chaoslegs on Apr 3, 2008 9:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I thought the story that we got from Japan since the 1980s is how much stress there is about job performance. Maybe less on job insecurity, but being offset by the need to perform well for the company.

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Check the back pages of newspapers.
Posted by: nightgaunt on Apr 3, 2008 1:09 PM   
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You would be amazed at what gets through the corporate press. They don't think most people will read the back pages. I,however, do.
Also some shows on PBS (Now and Moyer's Journal)and also Democracy Now too for alternate news sources.
Proof yet again that the USA is far down on the totem pole of 'advanced' countries. Of course the elites are living well and growing more paranoid,with good reason,as the economic crunch crushes us ever more harder.

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One Branch of the New Deal
Posted by: Dianka on Apr 3, 2008 8:54 PM   
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Outstanding item. Someday, we might have the courage to discuss how one branch of the New Deal, our former welfare programs, moved millions out of poverty and hopelessness, bringing our economic disparities to historic lows. Contrary to popular myth, these programs were tremendously successful in enabling people to work their way out of poverty, usually into the middle class. Via basic aid and legitimate education and job training programs, some 80% of AFDC recipients were able to voluntarily quit welfare within five years, becoming productive tax payers, and I would consider that a shining success! Financial aid enabled families to secure a measure of stability so that they were able to move forward, off of welfare, repaying (via their taxes) everything they had received in welfare aid. The nation as a whole benefited.

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THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS A HEAVY DOSE OF TRUTH..........WE WILL NEED
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Apr 10, 2008 9:29 PM   
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TO CHECK THE OTHER THINGS THE JAPANESE HAVE BORROWED from us. The capacity to mass produce quality products was an American invention adopted by the Japanese. You will note that they no longer 'copy'. They originate.

Not many years ago young Americans were the tallest people in the world. We certainly aren't now. The Dutch are. How did this happen?

Every farmer knows that when feeding out animals the weight gain is in youth. This requires adequate feed and good health. How does this affect people?

Its simple. Our young people are sick too much durinjg their growth stage. They are stunted by illness. Other countries with national health average less illness during the growth spurt of their children.

Lets go back to the article. How much does stress damage well being? There certainly is enough suggestion here to call for some good science.

Did you ever notice that the British favor a different explanation for the origin of illness than we do/

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