Kwei Quartey for Michael - Thursday
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Kwei Quartey |
Born in Ghana, he now lives with his family in Pasadena, where until recently he practised medicine. Now he is concentrating full time on writing. Our gain! Michael Connelly said of his work: �Searing and original and done just right . . . Inspector Darko Dawson is relentless, and I look forward to riding with him again." If you haven't read any of the Darko mysteries, start with Wife of the Gods. You'll want to read them all.
In this thoughtful and thought-provoking piece, Kwei asks:
Does rising economic inequality lead to more murder?
The income inequality gap appears to have a relationship to the homicide rate in different countries. Complex, scholarly articles have considered the question in depth. The FBI has a study on the topic, and there�s a website called inequality.org. Professor Emeritus Martin Dalyin the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada has written a book called Killing the Competition: Economic Inequality and Homicide. He argues that homicides, which are primarily male-on-male and not male-on-female as often thought, are rooted in the fierce competition between and among men. He connects this to income inequality using one of the most popular measures of inequality, the Gini coefficient (or index or ratio). You don�t need to know about the Gini in detail, but essentially, a coefficient of 0% means maximum equality, and 100% is maximum inequality. So, the higher the Gini, the more inequitable the society is from an income/economy standpoint.
However, hidden behind this graph is a third element that could skew the result, specifically, access to firearms. Compared to the US, for example, Norway has both a low Gini index and a low homicide-by-firearm rate, but availability of guns in the US is far greater than in Norway, and it�s fair to wonder how much that difference is influencing the results.
COUNTRY | GINI COEFFICIENT (%) | INTENTIONAL HOMICIDE RATE (per 100,000 population) |
Slovakia | 25 | 1.1 |
Sweden | 28 | 1.1 |
France | 29 | 1.2 |
Switzerland | 30 | 0.5 |
Canada | 32 | 1.7 |
UK | 35 | 1.2 |
USA | 39 | 5.4 |
Turkey | 40 | 4.3 |
Ghana | 42 | 6.1 |
Mexico | 46 | 19.2 |
Brazil | 47 | 29.5 |
China | 47 | 0.6 |
Nigeria | 49 | 9.9 |
Rwanda | 50 | 2.5 |
South Africa | 62 | 34 |
Table 1. GINI Coefficient v Intentional Homicide Rate for selected countries
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Fig. 3 Ghana, West Africa, on the Gulf of Guinea (Shutterstock) |
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Fig 4. Luxury high-rise apartments in Accra (Photo: Kwei Quartey) |
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Fig. 5 High-rise office building under construction, Accra (Photo: Kwei Quartey) |
Meanwhile, for ordinary folks, plumbing and road infrastructure go neglected.
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Fig. 6 Unauthorized wood shack in Jamestown, Accra, without interior plumbing (Photo: Kwei Quartey) |
This readily observable inequality appears reflected in Ghana�s Gini coefficient, which is higher than that of the US, and so is Ghana�s respective homicide rate of 6.1. But according to the World Bank, Ghana�s homicide rate decreased overall from 2.2 per 100,000 population in 2001 to 1.7 in 2011. The jump to 6.1 in 2012 is surprising and out of place. Was that an unexplained �blip,� an error in data collection, or is it indeed correct? I have no figures for the years following 2012, so we can�t see how the 6.1 data point trended thereafter. I have requested updated figures from Ghana�s Statistical Service but haven�t yet heard back from them. Knowing Ghana well, it could be a while.
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