An enduring paradox in the history of humanity is that although
the rich are significantly happier than the poor within any country at
any moment, average happiness levels change very little as people's
incomes rise in tandem over time. The question of happiness is central
to our lifestyles, religions and societies. It can be argued, in fact,
that all that we do is ultimately for the conquest and increase of
happiness.
Happiness is also a central tenet of the science of
economics: the measurement of changes of income levels vis-a-vis changes
in levels of happiness have been interpreted to mean that happiness
depends on relative rather than absolute income. However, another
interpretation is true, that is gains in happiness that might have been
expected to result from growth in absolute income have not materialized
because of the ways in which people in affluent societies have generally
spent their incomes.
Considerable evidence suggests that if we
use an increase in our incomes, as many of us do, simply to buy bigger
houses and more expensive cars, then we do not end up any happier than
before. But if we use an increase in our incomes to buy more of certain
inconspicuous goods - such as freedom from a long commute or a stressful
job - then the evidence paints a very different picture. The less we
spend on conspicuous consumption goods, the better we can afford to
alleviate congestion; and the more time we can devote to family and
friends, to exercise, sleep, travel, and other restorative activities.
On the best available evidence, reallocating our time and money in these
and similar ways would result in healthier, longer- and happier-lives.
A
case in point is Japan, which was a very poor country in 1960. Between
then and the late 1980s, its per capita income rose almost fourfold,
placing it among the highest in the industrialized world. Yet the
average happiness level reported by the Japanese was no higher in 1987
than in 1960.They had many more washing machines, cars, cameras, and
other things than they used to, but they did not register significant
gains on the happiness scale. The same pattern consistently shows up in
other countries as well, and that's a puzzle for economists. If getting
more income doesn't make people happier, why do they go to such lengths
to get more income?
It turns out that if we measure the
income-happiness relationship in another way, we get just what the
economists suspected all along. When we plot average happiness versus
average income for clusters of people in a given country at a given
time, we see that rich people are in fact much happier than poor people.
The evidence thus suggests that if income affects happiness, it is
relative, not absolute, income that matters. Some social scientists who
have pondered the significance of these patterns have concluded that, at
least for people in the world's richest countries, no useful purpose is
served by further accumulations of wealth. On its face, this should be a
surprising conclusion, since there are so many seemingly useful things
that having additional wealth would enable us to do. There is indeed
independent evidence that having more wealth would be a good thing,
provided it were spent in certain ways. The key insight supported by
this evidence is that even though we appear to adapt quickly to
across-the-board increases in our stocks of most material goods, there
are specific categories in which our capacity to adapt is more limited.
Additional spending in these categories appears to have the greatest
capacity to produce significant improvements in well-being.
The
human capacity to adapt to dramatic changes in life circumstances is
impressive. We adapt swiftly to losses as well as to gains. Ads for the
Provincial Lottery show participants fantasizing about how their lives
would change if they won. People who actually win the lottery typically
report the anticipated rush of euphoria in the weeks after their good
fortune. Follow-up studies done after several years, however, indicate
that these people are often no happier - and indeed, are in some ways
less happy - than before. In short, our extraordinary powers of
adaptation appear to help explain why absolute living standards simply
may not matter much once we escape the physical deprivations of abject
poverty. This interpretation is consistent with the impressions of
people who have lived or traveled extensively abroad, who report that
the struggle to get ahead seems to play out with much the same
psychological effects in rich societies as in those with more modest
levels of wealth.
So, therefore, the economic answer to the
question as to whether money buys happiness must be in the negative. The
evidence described earlier suggests that the satisfaction provided by
many conspicuous forms of consumption is more context sensitive than the
satisfaction provided by many less conspicuous forms of consumption. If
so, this would help explain why the absolute income and consumption
increases of recent decades have failed to translate into corresponding
increases in measured well-being.
Does Money Buy Happiness? An Economic Intrigue
Posted by CB Blogger
Blog, Updated at: 3:20 AM
