You've
probably heard of the term "Keeping up with the Joneses" which is all
about living up to the statuses others have attained, or in many cases acquiring a better status than others. Robert Frank, one of the
most popular economists in America, has written a book called Choosing the Right Pond in which his central
thesis is that ladder-climbing is a zero sum game, because if Tom acquires a
better social status than Dick, Dick has acquired a worse social status than
Tom, meaning on aggregate there is no gain.
While I
agree that being obsessed with prestige is bad for people, to me it's obvious
that Robert Frank is wrong (and uncharacteristically off form) in his assumption
that ladder-climbing is a zero sum game - it need not be. That is to say, for
every win there doesn't have to be a concomitant loss. Tom can acquire a better
ladder position than Dick while at the same time seeing Dick acquire a better ladder
position than him. The reason why is clear when we see ladder-climbing for what
it really ought to be (and often is), not as a world full of people climbing
the same ladder, but as a world full of people each with their own ladder and
lots of climbing potential. Now, sadly, it is certainly true that people are
often overly competitive in trying to obtain prestige - but they are the ones
for whom status is an unhealthy thing, because they are more worried about
their relative position in a sphere of rivalry and one-upmanship than they are getting
to the top of their own ladder of potential.
Once we
break away from metaphors and see how this happens in everyday life you'll know
exactly what I mean. Suppose we randomly picked seven people from Trafalgar Square this
lunchtime - Mary, Hristo, John, Hank, Gabriella, Ahmed and Debra. Each of them
values their own skills, talents, interests and achievements, but they also
realise that they are in a group in which every member has different skills,
talents, interests and achievements, and that no one in the group is particularly
worse off because of that.
Hank is
a big muscular American doorman. Physically he is the strongest, toughest, and
is top of the ladder on machismo. Ahmed is nowhere near as physically tough,
but being a theoretical physicist he is top of the ladder when it comes to
analytical thinking. Debra isn't as tough as Hank or as analytically smart as
Ahmed, but being a teacher she is top of the ladder when it comes motivation,
patience and tutelage. Hristo is a painter and decorator, which means he is the
expert if you need your living room renovated. Gabriella is a dancer, and is
queen in her ballet shoes. John is unemployed, but there are several things at
which John excels that the other six do not. No one can touch John on his
skateboard, or on the running track. If all seven were having a 400 metre race,
John would win hands down.
Everyone
in the group has different skills and talents, but here is the other important
thing; their individuality means that their skills and talents need not come at
the cost of anyone else's skills and talents. Gabriella can be queen of the
ballet without having that status in the least bit ruined by the fact that John
would trounce her in a race, or that Hristo can artex a ceiling to a higher
level.
Clearly,
as long as folk are not so terribly insecure that they constantly need validation
and reinforcement by being seen as better than others or of a higher social
standing, everyone can thrive by being the best that they can be. That is to
say, what should matter is doing the best you can do in an absolute sense, not
in a sense that's relative to other people's achievements.
You are
going to find yourself in many situations where you are top of the ladder in a particular
context, but low down on the ladder in other contexts. In one group you'll know
the most about history and be looked upon to speak the most wisdom. In another
group you'll be the one who can best inspire confidence in people's ability to
mentor. In some groups you'll be the best at DIY, in other groups you'd best to
delegate these responsibilities to someone better suited.
Here’s
the other important thing that stops it becoming a zero sum game. In a group in
which literary insight is highly valued, people will value literary insight if
you can provide it. But people who don't have any literary interest do not lose
any status in the literary circles by being unapprised of Thomas Hardy, James
Joyce and Jane Austen. Similarly, people who value having the right 'look' in
fashion or sporting prowess or the rarest collection of fine art are going to
have kudos in some groups, but their accomplishments will be of little interest
to those unaffected by such a milieu, because people outside that milieu
wouldn't confer status or prestige on anyone because of fashion, sporting
ability or collectable art.
Clearly
then, status is not zero sum - there can be multiple winners. Chris wins if he
gets to the top of his field in piano playing. But his status imposes no cost
on me if I want to get to the top of my field in theological prose. The only
people who get despondent about other people's relative success are those who
are competing for the same ground - and that's a despondency they can avoid by becoming more rounded people..