It is said that inequality is returning to modern nations and that this is manifest in the widening disparities in income
in the late 20th century. This trend is attributed to neo-liberalism, globalisation and immigration, and is seen as a turn
in the long-term trend towards a more civilised society. In this paper I challenge the idea of rising inequality. I argue
that income difference falls short as an indicator of inequality and cannot be meaningfully compared across time. Instead
I propose to measure inequality in another way, not by difference in presumed chances for a good life, but by the dispersion
of actual outcomes of life, using the standard deviation of life-satisfaction as an indicator. Comparison across time in EU
nations over the years 1973–2001 shows that the dispersion of life-satisfaction became smaller instead of larger. Comparison
across 80 nations in the 1990s also shows lower dispersion in the most modern countries. So the trend towards greater equality
seems to persist. If there is any truth in the theory that access to scarce resources has become more unequal, the tendency
must have been compensated in some way, possibly by greater equality in personal capabilities.
An earlier version of this paper was published in German in Glatzer, W., Habich, R. & Mayer, K-U. (eds) Sozialer Wandel und
gesellschaftliche Dauerbeobachtung, Festschrift für Wolfgang Zapf, Leske + Budrich, Opladen, Germany, 273–294, 2002.