With so much talk about all that’s wrong with the world and everything our country does wrong, it turns out there’s something we do right.  It’s called sports.  Not for adults.  That’s a whole other issue.  I’m talking about youth sports.  Summer league baseball.  Soccer.  Peewee football.  All of it.  Sure, every now and then parents get caught on tape fighting over a bad call, but that’s the exception.

A growing body of research is showing the social and economic benefits of participation in youth sports to be surprisingly large and overwhelmingly positive. Other things being equal, if a kid plays sports, he will earn more money, stay in school longer, and be more engaged in civic life.

The cool part of all this is how America differs from Europe in this way.  Read it.  It’s fascinating.

A recent scholarly paper by economists Alberto Alesina and Edward Glaeser of Harvard University and Bruce Sacerdote of Dartmouth College found that countries tend to build large welfare states when citizens believe that success in life is largely determined by luck. When citizens believe that hard work determines success, they tend to build leaner and more economically efficient governments.

Americans are remarkably different from Europeans in this regard. If you ask Americans whether the economically disadvantaged are poor because they are lazy or unlucky, 60 percent say lazy. If you ask Europeans, only 26 percent finger laziness. Alesina and his colleagues argue that these attitudes shape society by shaping governmental and social institutions.

“But,” the article asks, “why do these attitudes exist?”  Youth sports has something to do with it.  Keep reading.