Later editions of The Spirit Level include an appendix which shows Pearson Correlation Coefficients and two-sided p-values. As the Pearson coefficient shows a different figure than the r-squared, I have included the Pearson coefficients and the two-sided p-values for The Spirit Level Delusion graphs below for anybody who should want to compare them.
The first number is the correlation coefficient (the strength of the correlation). The figure in brackets is the p-value (the confidence that the correlation has not been caused by chance). Both numbers go from 0.00 to 1.00. For the first figure, the higher the number, the stronger the correlation. For the latter, lower numbers represent stronger associations. Statistical significance is usually represented by a p-value of at least 0.05, with 0.01 or less being preferred.
Life expectancy (UN 2004): -0.4515 (0.03)
Life expectancy (UN 2006): 0.16 (0.42)
Life expectancy (UN 2009): 0.22 (0.27)
Obesity: 0.01 (0.96)
Smoking: -0.31 (0.11)
Alcohol: -0.25 (0.21)
Infant mortality: 0.13 (0.51)
Trust: -0.29 (0.13)
Teen births: 0.32 (0.10)
Happiness: 0.05 (0.81)
Homicide: 0.30 (0.12)
Recycling/suicide: 0.64 (0.04)
Prison: 0.59 (<0.01)
Crime: -0.15 (0.45)
Victim of crime: -0.344 (0.21)
Recycling: -0.739 (<0.01)
Charity: 0.40 (0.25)
Foreign aid: 0.527 (0.01)
Single parents: -0.06 (0.285)
Suicide: -0.475 (0.01)
Unemployment: 0.033 (0.88)
Community life: 0.54 (0.03)
Alcohol/divorce: 0.35 (0.12)
Education: -0.154 (0.44)
Quality of life: 0.13 (0.51)
Homicide/suicide: -0.03 (0.86)
% GDP in tax/inequality: -0.65 (<0.01)
Happiness/income: 0.62 (<0.01)
Trust/income: 0.56 (<0.01)
Mr. Snowdon,
ReplyDeleteThese are interesting correlations in their strength and weakness...does each correlation correspond to a page number in the hardback version of the book, and does each correlation correspond to inequality being correlated with each variable on your list?
Thanks,
Ross