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Gross National Happiness
By Lykke E. Andersen*,
La Paz,
16 July 2007.
“Wealth
is the ability to fully experience life.”
Henry David Thoreau
"Being rich is having money; being wealthy is having time."
Margaret Bonnano
“The problems that exist in the world today cannot be solved by
the level of thinking that created them.”
Albert Einstein
Economists, especially development economists, almost always
measure the level of well-being in a society by per capita
income, noticing that this simple economic measure is highly
correlated with most other indicators of development they can
think of (life expectancy, child mortality, income equality,
education levels, etc.).
However, whereas income per capita correlates highly with a
large variety of social indicators of development, it does not
seem to explain happiness, or subjective well-being, very well.
According to Lears’ Quality of Life Index
(1), for example, people in Nigeria on average feel happier
than people in Austria, despite the fact that per capita incomes
(adjusted for purchasing power) are about 29 times higher in
Austria and child mortality about 40 times higher in Nigeria
(2). Also, despite substantial economic growth in United
States, Japan, and France during the post-war period
(1946-1992), the level of happiness in all three countries has
stayed approximately constant
(3).
At the individual level there is also little correlation between
subjective well-being (SWB) and objective measures of resources.
For example, SWB correlates only 0.12 with income, 0.13 with
physical attractiveness, 0.10 with physician-rated health, and
0.17 with intelligence
(4)
.
Why is happiness so difficult to tackle for economists? One
reason is that
it depends to a large extent on deep personality traits: A
generally happy person is only shortly affected by even severe
adverse events, such as a spinal cord injury, and a generally
miserable person who wins the lottery won't be happy for long.
In addition, the human mind has an
extraordinary power
to
adapt to changing circumstances and compensate for specific
handicaps,
which implies that people usually develop strategies based on
the assets and advantages they have, and ignore strategies which
would require assets that they don't have.
Finally,
love, one of the main causes of happiness, is a complete mystery
for economists.
But there are some straightforward contradictions between
increasing income and increasing happiness that even economists
should be able to understand. For example, maximizing income and
consumption is often done at the expense of the environment, and
contaminated water and filthy air has an adverse effect on our
health and well-being. In addition, increasing your income will
almost always require you to sacrifice time - the most binding
constraint in the world. Everybody, rich or poor, only has 24
hours per day, and if you spend 12-16 hours per day working, you
don’t have much time left being happy -- unless you really love
your work.
Job stress has been labeled the “20th Century
Disease” by the United Nations and a “World Wide Epidemic” by
the World Health Organization. It is estimated to cost the US
industry more than $300 billion annually (about 30 times
Bolivia’s total GDP) in accidents, absenteeism, employee
turnover, diminished productivity and direct medical, legal, and
insurance costs
(5). Many of these costs increase GDP, by the way.
It is not obvious that this should be a development ideal to
inspire to.
People, tricked by TV series and the trillion dollar advertising
industry, may spend too much time and money on material things
that promise to make them happy, but in reality don’t. Poor
people, who are not inundated with all that propaganda, may
actually be making better choices than rich people in terms of
their own happiness, but the development community is
desperately trying to get them into the same rat race as the
rest, so that they can increase their level of income and
consumption.
But a new way of thinking is emerging among economists in a
branch called Happiness Economics. Here researchers are
attempting to measure and understand the determinants of
happiness, with the intention of getting to the core of the
welfare concept economists are always trying to maximize. Bhutan
was the first (in 1972), and so far only, country in the World
to introduce Gross National Happiness (GNH) instead of GDP and
to use it as a unifying vision for its development plans and
policy.
The Inter-American Development Bank is currently launching
several projects on Quality of Life in Latin America and plans
to organize a range of events around this topic on its 50th
anniversary in 2009
(6). Hopefully this is just the kind of new thinking needed
to solve today's
problems of poverty and inequality.
(*) Director, Institute for Advanced
Development Studies, La Paz, Bolivia. The author happily
receives comments at the following e-mail:
landersen@inesad.edu.bo.
(1) Lears, J. F. (1996) ‘Quality of Life
Index’, International Living 15, p. 1, pp. 9–18.
(2) Human Development 2005. United
Nations.
(3) Veenhoven, R. (1993) Happiness in
Nations: Subjective Appreciation of Life in
56 Nations 1946–1992
(RISBO, Rotterdam).
(4) Diener, E. & E. Suh (1997)
‘Measuring Quality of Life: Economic, Social and Subjective
Indicators.’ Social Indicators Research 40: 189–216,
1997.
(5)
www.stress.org/job.htm .
(6)
www.iadb.org/res .
Ó
Institute for Advanced Development Studies 2006.
The opinions expressed in this newsletter are those of the
author and do not necessarily coincide with those of the Institute.
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