A <b>persuasive and highly readable</b> account of how rising inequality, and not just absolute poverty, is undermining our politics, social cohesion, long-term prosperity and general well-being
- Barack Obama,
Keith Payne has written <b>an eye-opening book with profound resonance for the state of our world</b>. We all know that income inequality has dire economic and societal consequences, but <i>THE BROKEN LADDER</i> shows that it has deep psychological impact too, affecting our decision-making, our mood and our health. <b>A thoughtful look - and a rallying cry - into the way our environment shapes us all</b>
- Susan Cain author of <i>QUIET: THE POWER OF INTROVERTS IN A WORLD THAT CAN'T STOP TALKING</i>,
<i>THE BROKEN LADDER</i>'s examination of the consequences of inequality - of what it is like to be poor and to feel poor - is <b>as profound as it is revelatory</b>. Keith Payne is a lovely, graceful writer. Replete with gems of research studies, insights and illuminating examples and implications, <b>this book will change the way you think about your world</b>
- Sonja Lyubomirsky, author of <i>THE HOW OF HAPPINESS</i>,
<i>THE BROKEN LADDER</i> is<b> an important, timely and beautifully written account of how inequality affects us all</b>. Though it surely plagues the poorest and most vulnerable members of society, Keith Payne expertly and engagingly shows that it also touches the wealthy and privileged. Payne marshals the cutting edge in psychology and neuroscience research to explain how inequality influences our political and religious beliefs, how we perform at work, and how we respond to stress and physical threats - and how we can combat its most insidious effects on our lives
- Adam Alter, author of <i>IRRESISTIBLE: WHY WE CAN'T STOP CHECKING, SCROLLING, CLICKING AND WATCHING</i>,
Brilliant ... <b>[A]n important, fascinating read </b>arguing that inequality creates a public health crisis ... Payne challenges a common perception that the real problem isn't inequality but poverty, and he's persuasive that societies are shaped not just by disadvantage at the bottom but also by inequality across the spectrum
- Nicholas Kristof, NEW YORK TIMES
<b>Authoritative, thought provoking, accessible </b>and well worth a spot on your summer reading list ... Payne embraces the egalitarian view that inequality of income is problem in and of itself-economically, morally, politically ... While we have come to understand that a society can suffer from having either too much inequality or too little, the challenge now is identifying and getting to that sweet spot in between
- Steven Pearlstein, WASHINGTON POST
Keith Payne, professor of psychology and neuroscience, weaves strands of memoir into <i>THE BROKEN LADDER</i>, which accepts inequality of income as a problem but then <b>goes on explain how it affects our mood, decision making and even our immune systems</b>
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