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The Narcissism of Minor Differences: How America and Europe Are Alike [Paperback]

Peter Baldwin
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 1, 2011
There is much heated rhetoric about the widening gulf between Europe and America. But are the US and Europe so different? Peter Baldwin, one of the world's leading historians of comparative social policy, thinks not, and in this bracingly argued but remarkably informed polemic, he lays out how similar the two continents really are. Drawing on the latest evidence from sources such as the United Nations, the World Bank, IMF, and other international organizations, Baldwin offers a fascinating comparison of the United States and Europe, looking at the latest statistics on the economy, crime, health care, education and culture, religion, the environment, and much more. It is a book filled with surprising revelations. For most categories of crime, for instance, America is safe and peaceful by European standards. But the biggest surprise is that, though there are many differences between America and Europe, in almost all cases, these differences are no greater than the differences among European nations. Europe and the US are, in fact, part of a common, big-tent grouping. America is not Sweden, for sure. But nor is Italy Sweden, nor France, nor even Germany. And who says that Sweden is Europe? Anymore than Vermont is America?

"Meticulous, insistent, and elegant."
--John Lloyd, Financial Times

"A must-read...filled with intriguing facts that add nuance to what can often be a black-and-white debate."
--Foreign Affairs

"An exhaustive and enthralling catalogue of our commonalities that begs a reconsideration of just what it means to be European or American."
--Publishers Weekly

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

While pundits and politicians frequently seize upon the differences between hissing cousins Europe and America, Baldwin (Disease and Democracy) combs a dizzying array of statistics (on, for example, life expectancy, greenhouse gas emissions, homosexual experiences, voter turnout, blood donations, illiteracy, prison populations) to measure how deep and wide the chasm actually is. His findings, punctuated by easy-to-interpret charts and insightful analysis, reveal just how different the two continents really aren't—and that the animosity isn't symmetrical: European disdain for all things American is much stronger than any enmity the other way. Still, Europe and America are comparable on primary and secondary education spending, on religiosity in certain regions and, surprisingly, on health-care outcomes. While no endorsement of the current U.S. system, Baldwin's data shows that American health-care outcomes are comparable and often better than those in Europe. An exhaustive and enthralling catalogue of our commonalities that begs a reconsideration of just what it means to be European or American. (Nov.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review


"Is America exceptional? Many say yes, and provide supporting statistics. Peter Baldwin looks at all the statistics; places them in cultural and political context, compares among nations and within nations. The results are surprising and compelling. America is not that exceptional. But this book is."--Sidney Verba, Professor of Government, Harvard University, and author of Voice and Equality


"This is a most original--and indispensable--contribution to a trans-Atlantic debate as old as the American Republic. What Americans have celebrated as 'novus ordo seclorum,' Europeans have fingered with contempt: The U.S. as haven of yokels, den of social injustice and bastion of unregenerate capitalism. The stronger the opinion, the weaker the facts. Peter Baldwin has collected them with acuity and brilliance--a much-needed first in the turbulent relationship. And, lo, these transatlantic cousins are indeed family--a lot more similar than either would want to admit. Statistics have never been more gripping."--Josef Joffe, Editor of Die Zeit


"In this wise, fair, witty and civilized book [Baldwin] has not only cleared away a jungle of ugly chauvinist weeds on both sides of the ocean, he has made it possible for both Americans and Europeans to understand one another and perhaps even become friends once again."--Godfrey Hodgson, author of The Myth of American Exceptionalism


"Peter Baldwin argues that the U.S. and Europe have more similarities than differences--and indeed, that Germany and Greece differ at least as much as California and Mississippi. He then goes on to explain why so much is made of transatlantic differences by the freedom-fry-serving U.S. Congress and U.S.-critical French press. Not to be missed by anyone who likes to be provoked into thinking new thoughts about old issues."--Barry Eichengreen, Professor of Political Science and Economics, University of California-Berkeley, and author of The European Economy Since 1945


"Peter Baldwin has proved beyond any doubt that it's not just self-defeating to concentrate on the supposed differences between Europe and the US, it's also factually inaccurate. Both European anti-Americans and American anti-Europeans will be forced to think again by this hard-hitting, fluent, well-researched book. We have more in common with each other than we do with anyone else: it's hard to think of a more profoundly important message for the first decade of the War against Terror, politically, economically, socially and morally."
--Andrew Roberts, author of A History of the English-Speaking Peoples Since 1900


"An exhaustive and enthralling catalogue of our commonalities that begs a reconsideration of just what it means to be European or American." --Publishers Weekly


"Meticulous, insistent and elegant book." --John Lloyd, Columnist Financial Times


"The book is a must-read...and not just because it is filled with intriguing facts that add nuance to what can often be a black-and-white debate. Baldwin is right to point out that although the distance between the European left and the American right is extreme, the difference between the average positions of Europe and the United States is less than is often believed." --Andrew Moravcsik, Foreign Affairs


"Baldwin's writing is crisp, clipped and generally pleasing on the eye... Gargantuan amounts of information are synthesised concisely, often enlivened by a telling observation." --Peter Geoghegan, Sunday Business Post


"This is an important book...Baldwin uses concise language and clear data to make his point." --Sacramento Book Review


"At last, we have the essential complement to Robert Kagan's Of Paradise and Power, and its subtitle 'How America and Europe Are Alike' will surely evoke protest from those on both sides of the Atlantic who have become vested advocates of the differences between the United States and Europe and the manifest superiority of one side over and against the other...The contention of Peter Baldwin is that all of the difference-mongering about the United States and Europe is wildly overblown that, in fact, across a panoply of quantifiable social characteristics and policy outcomes, the United States generally falls not outside the European range, but squarely within it. In 212 charts, 60 pages of footnotes, and a crackling prose style refreshingly at odds with the statistical material under consideration, he proves the case beyond a reasonable doubt." --Tod Lindberg, The Weekly Standard


" [A] highly contrarian and entertaining book. Baldwin is a graceful, often invigorating writer...The Narcissism of Minor Differences is ostensibly a polemic, and indeed the conclusions the book reaches are no doubt controversial. Yet there's very little rancor in it, almost none of the ideological toxicity that normally runs through books about countries, people, and ideas that are not our own." --Denis Boyles, Claremont Review of Books


"...this is a rich source of comparative data, to be thoroughly recommended to anyone who loves league tables, who wants to compare their country's performance with that of others, or to appreciate the sheer variety of social practices. The charts are always intriguing and sometimes entertaining." --Michael Mann, New Left Review


"This book is nothing short of a tour de force. It is elegantly written, superbly researched, acutely argued, profoundly original.... Baldwin enters into this snake-pit of overcharged debates and oversensitive normative arguments undeterred, eager and willing to clear up this nonsense once and for all, with the help of numbers, numbers, and more numbers. In a dazzling display of data that I have rarely, if ever, encountered anywhere, Baldwin wants to prove that Americans and Europeans, far from being from Mars and Venus, are not only very much denizens of this earth, but actually close neighbors, relatives who are much more alike than different." --Andrei S. Markovits, The Forum


"Baldwin has written an important book challenging many firmly established assumptions on US exceptionalism, and many more issues... Baldwin's wide-ranging analysis provides a welcome contribution on comparative welfare politics." --Tord Skogedal Lindén, Basic Income Studies



Product Details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (October 1, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0199836825
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199836826
  • Product Dimensions: 6.1 x 0.9 x 9.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,347,986 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author


Peter Baldwin is Professor of History at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is the author of Disease and Democracy: The Industrialized World Faces AIDS (2005), Contagion and the State in Europe, 1830-1930 (2005), and The Politics of Social Solidarity: Class Bases of the European Welfare State, 1875-1975 (2008).

Customer Reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Americans = Mars, Europeans = Venus, right? Not according to the author of this book. Through a series of tart mini-essays and comments, Baldwin makes what is essentially a collection of bar graphs comparing various aspects of America and Western European countries interesting, fun, and thought-provoking to read. The upshot of his argument is that, in many ways, America falls within the European mainstream on a host of social, economic, and cultural issues; indeed, the differences between European nations (such as those between northern and southern Europe) are often more pronounced than the differences between America and Europe-in-general. He is intellectually honest enough to recognize that his thesis is likely to be as troubling to liberals who look to Scandinavia-style social welfare states as a secular "Mecca" as it is to conservatives who dismiss Western Europe as decadent and biologically exhausted. Of necessity, more subjective measurements of difference are not included, and I suspect that here is where more significant differences would be observed. (The recent World Cup puts me in mind of one: the frequent racist heckling of black and foreign soccer players in many European countries, which has thankfully been expunged from most American sporting events. How could the willingness to express such sentiments be "measured" without introducing bias?)

I would like to see a revised version of the book which includes the former Warsaw Pact nations. Many of these countries have taken a more "American" approach to economic development, tax policy, and so forth than the EU nations; will their influence "seep into" the Western European countries, or will the pressure to "conform" be too great?
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5.0 out of 5 stars Baldwin hits the nail on the head... December 23, 2011
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Without a doubt, I believe that Americans have been obtuse for 200 years,
and Europeans have been obtuse for 2000 years...Anthony St. John
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars An antidote for the usual assumptions. August 11, 2010
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Most politically-enagaged Americans already think they know about Europe; either it's a decadent and pusillanimous continent that should serve as a warning or a more civilized and socially-cohesive place that America should aspire to emulate. Baldwin challenges these lazy assumptions with a mountain of objective data that show America tends to fall within the European range in a host of quantifiable respects. While not denying that the United States is distinct in a number of ways, the author shows convincingly that the differences between the US and "Europe" is often less pronounced than the differences between individual European countries. Perhaps the most valuable implicit lesson in the book is that "Europe" as a concept is extremely nebulous and not particularly valuable for comparisons. Baldwin's book is a quick read and though I sometime found the statistics a bit dry, his constant resort to quantifiable data keeps the thrust of the argument from becoming too subjective. I wish he would follow up his work here with a more opinionated sequel, but perhaps that would detract from the modest, objective qualities of this book. A gem.
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11 of 24 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Cherry picking at its worst August 6, 2010
Format:Hardcover
While the author makes a good point now and then, in general he has engaged in the worst form of cherry picking of facts and data to make his case. For example, he tries to argue that Americans are "wealthier" than Germans, the French and Europeans in general by relying on GDP per capita and average income as the sole measurements. But anyone who has spent any time in Europe knows that these countries have everything that Americans have and then some, in terms of quality of life and material things. Beyond the material things, everyone has health care, and its better quality than in the US (in France and other countries, doctors still do house calls!). Europeans also have more generous retirement pensions, paid parental leave (after the birth of child), paid sick leave, much lower cost university education, way more vacations and holidays, etc. THAT'S part of how they measure quality of life and wealth. Baldwin's use of "GDP per capita" and "average income" data tell you nothing about distribution of income, i.e. if one person has $99 and another person has $1 their "average income" is $50 -- yet one of these people has 99 times the income of the other.

This is just one example out of many. Unfortunately Baldwin seems more intent on being a contrarian and upsetting the apple cart of conventional wisdom than actually shedding some light on the truth of the matter. And to accomplish his goal he has engaged in the worst sort of cherry picking of facts and data.

For a more balanced discussion of differences between the US and Europe I highly recommend Steven Hill's excellent "Europe's Promise" ([...]).
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