Title: Unit III: Class, Race and Gender
1Unit III Class, Race and Gender
- Inequality as the backbone of social structure
10/24
2Inequality and Functions or Dysfunctions
- Functionalists tend to view inequality as a
central element of social control, rewards,
incentives, and opportunities, - as a thermostat.
- Conflict theorists tend to view inequality as a
game of Monopoly and inherited privilege, - as a vicious cycle or a cancer.
3Insight of functional theory
- Inequality represents a system of rewards,
incentives and controls. - To the degree that the inequality serves crucial
social functions, reducing it might be killing
the goose that lays the golden eggs. - For example it could reward people for doing
important work, - or it might motivate people to gain training,
- or it might reflect differences in peoples
abilities or priorities
4Insight of conflict theory
- Wealth and poverty can feed on themselves as a
vicious cycle. - To the extent that inequality becomes divisive,
dysfunctional or cancerous, we need to limit it. - Many societies in the past have failed because
they had to devote more and more resources to
coercion and social control, - because they were divided by conflicts over
inequality - and poverty is wasteful and dangerous.
5The functional model of stratification
- The functional model was dominant in the
mid-twentieth century. - It argued that inequality is functionally
necessary to motivate training and attract talent
to important positions, - and that therefore all societies are stratified,
- and reduction of stratification would make
everyone worse off.
6Murrays functionalism
- Charles Murray argues
- A defense of income differences It is justified
to pay the high IQ businessman more than the
low-IQ ditch digger because that is the only way
to make the economy grow and produce wealth in
which the ditch digger can share. It is a matter
of economic pragmatism and it is also right.
After the experience of the 20th c. it is hard to
imagine that anyone could disagree. (The Bell
Curve pp 527-8) - This is the view that was dominent in sociology
in the 1950s but is not accepted today.
7Inequality as a thermostat
- A thermostat is designed to maintain heat
- Functionalists see inequality as functioning to
maintain incentives and rewards
(lack of) heat
furnace
-
(lack of) incentives and rewards
Control structures generating inequality
-
8Formalization by Davis Moore
- Not all jobs are equally important.
- Not all people are equally able or motivated.
- Training takes time and money.
- Stratification is an unconsciously evolved device
to motivate the most able people to acquire the
training and to diligently fill the most
important positions. - Therefore, all societies must be stratified.
9Strengths of the functional model
- All developed societies are stratified.
- Increased pay is a strong motivator,
- Especially in a society where ones childrens
life chances depend, importantly, on ones
income. - Some forms and ranges of inequality are widely
believed to be functional.
10Weaknesses of the model
- It does not account for property income, and
appears to be inconsistent with it. - It does not account for ascriptive (race, gender)
differences in income. - Many functionally indispensable jobs (public
health worker, teacher) are paid less than many
jobs that appear more dispensable (advertising). - It does not specify any level of inequality.
- It ignores dysfunctions.
11The point of Spaceship Earth
- We referred to a thought-experiment during the
last week before the break, - suggested by Feagins discussion of the analysis
by Hawken. - In each column, decide the range of inequality
between elite and the lower ¼ that you think
would be most functional, - and cross out any range that you think would be
nonviable and non-sustainable. - This implies that inequality is not like kindness.
12Gans ironic functional theory
- Gans (p.363,368) argued that the poor clean
toilets and give work to social workers, bookies
and police. - But Gans point is that you can always find
functions of any condition. - That does not show whether we would be better off
if inequality was greater, or less than it is.
13The conflict model of stratification
- We have seen that the core of conflict theory is
that possession of resources tends to increase
access to further resources, as in Monopoly
Properties (wealth)
Rents (income)
14Reasons that an excess of inequality might be
dysfunctional
- Inequality plausibly feeds all social problems
- Academic failure,
- Crime, juvenile delinquency, drug use, gangs,
- Conflict and a police state
- Family breakdown,
- Anomie,
- ill health
-
- Could a free and well-functioning spaceship have
an income ratio of more than 1,000 1 ? Conflict
theorists say No
15Can the rules of Monopoly be changed?
- Different rules will lead to different outcomes.
The usual rules accentuate positive feedback and
produce absolute polarization in a few hours. - What are some rule changes that would prevent or
slow polarization? - What are some rule changes that would speed it up?
16Is it possible to limit inequality?
- It is a presumption of the sociological
imagination that people create society, just as
society creates people. - Different societies restrict different kinds of
inequality in many ways, some direct (taxation,
regulation),some indirect (unions, markets), some
mixed (insurance arrangements.)
individuals
Social structures
17Can one combine functional and conflict theories?
- There are many possible combinations,
- focusing on different kinds of inequalities and
different processes. - But a great deal of ones analysis depends on
whether one believes that the most important and
the most powerful processes are - A) the thermostats (functionalists)
- B) the Vicious cycles (conflict theorists)
18Myrdal model revisted
- For example, we have seen that Myrdal pictured
the dynamic of race relations as a
self-reinforcing structure of inequality and
racism restrained by the normative system of the
American Creed
violates
Racial inequality
American Creed
Racism
- generates reforms
19How much inequality is there?
- There are many kinds of inequality, and income
inequality is not the largest. - Like most social inequalities, income is
distributed very differently from variables such
as height, strength, speed or ability, which are
distributed normally. - There are several hundred billionaires in the US,
each with property incomes more than 10,000 times
as large as the poverty line.
20Poverty line and minimum wage
- The federal poverty line is calculated as a
measure of subsistence by taking the cost of
the amount of food required to avoid
malnutrition, and multiplying by 3 (because
people spend about 1/3 of their income on food). - A 4-person family with one earner who makes the
minimum wage, will usually fall below the poverty
line.
21Calculation of the poverty line
- 14,000 for everyone for everything per yr.
- 3,666 per person for everything per year.
- 1,222 per person for food per year.
- 3.35 per person for food per day.
- 1.12 per meal.
- 6/hr.x40hrs./wk. x50wk/yr. 12,000 gross
22Who is poor? The old vs. the young. Why?
23How and why has inequality increased?
- Each of these shifts involve tens of millions of
people, and they are complex. - Some of the social forces and social policies
driving them are highly indirect e.g. changes in
the world economy, GATT, unionization, etc. - But the main trends in the poverty rate of the
old and the young are driven by policy. - As a country, we decided to lower the poverty
rate of the elderly, and we did so. - We reduced efforts to lower the poverty rate of
the young, especially welfare. - Charles Murrays analyses were central to this
choice.
24Rise and fall of the functional model of
stratification.
- Today, most sociologists believe that the
dynamics of inequality are more a matter of
power, influence and organization than of
functional needs. - What is the optimal level of income inequality?
- Sociologists disagree (social science cannot
say), - but most believe a lot less than the 110,000
that exists in the US today, - which has a lot of dysfunctional consequences.
25The forced division of labor revisited
- Durkhiems analysis of organic solidarity
requires that there be an open and fair
competition for higher positions. - Durkheim believed that inherited inequalities
create a forced division of labor. - Durkheimian functionalism can generate liberal or
radical positions depending whether reforms or
even structural changes are viewed as necessary
to generate organic solidarity.
26Why equality of opportunity implies inequality
- Opportunity is usually understood as the
opportunity to make something of ones life I.e.
to become unequal. - (There is no equality of opportunity if everyone
gets the same result no matter what they do.) - Therefore equality of opportunity implies
inequality.
27Paradoxes of equality of opportunity
- One of the reasons that the high proportion of
children growing up in poverty is troubling to
most people is that it appears to conflict with
equality of opportunity. - Most Americans defend that ideal ,
- but it has a paradoxical relation to inequality
- Equality of opportunity implies inequality
- Inequality implies inequality of opportunity.
28Why inequality implies inequality of opportunity
- However, if parents have grossly unequal
resources, they give their children unequal
opportunities. - By any conception of equality of opportunity, it
is hard to believe that it exists between those
growing up malnourished and those growing up in
affluence. - Thus inequality produces inequality of
opportunity. - And this extends to school, health, legal
defense, and all other areas of social life.
29Possible resolutions of the paradox
- From Durkheim to current theory, there are many
different kinds of resolution of the paradoxes. - Most people believe that inequalities are
permissible, but only if they are not too large. - And most people believe that access to health
care and education should be buffered against
market inequalities.