Title: Happiness research in the dismal science'
1Happiness research in the dismal science.
The Fred Gruen Lecture
2Outline
- Hisboldness in expressing his views, lack of
fear in being proved wrongare qualities that
made him a great role model (David Gruen on Fred
Gruen) - A quick overview of happiness economics how do
we measure happiness and what do we think we know
so far. - Economics and happiness up close the costs and
benefits of economic development. - What would a happiness maximising country look
like based on current best-guess ?
3A quick overview of happiness economics
- Following the French sociologist Cantril
(1960,1965), and decades of psychologists, a
whole horde of economists has started to look at
happiness across countries in the last 10 years. - In Australia also, many economists have joined
the debate recently - Alison Booth, Nick Carroll, Bruce Chapman, Paul
Flateau, Andrew Leigh, Mike Shields, Mark Wooden,
and several others.
4The questions used
- How satisfied are you at present with your life,
all things considered? - 0 (completely dissatisfied) to 10 (completely
satisfied). - Other formats have been used
- 0-5, or 0-20 scales, or verbal answers
happy/unhappy - the above is the most used one.
5Validation?
Self-reported happiness relates strongly
to. ?
- activity in the brains pleasure centers (Dr.
Heaths prisoner experiments in 1950s). Happiness
(and emotions generally) are suppressed by fear - health, smiles, positive emotional arousal, and
future intentions the unhappy quit and are
unhealthy. - People communicate happiness as information to
others ? people are thus reasonably good at
predicting others happiness there appears a
universal body language of happiness which we are
evolutionary geared to picking up Happiness and
reading it are thus probably hard-wired.
6What makes a person happy?
- Not at all children, education, and rain (in Oz
cities). - Surprisingly little but a bit higher income, a
recognised socially valued activity (a job!),
having a partner, regular sex, sunshine, and rain
(in Oz countryside). - Quite a bit health, positive mood, self-esteem,
lack of fear.
7What matters most? Benevolent fate?
8Does this mean religion?
9Hence
- Believing many things are out of your control,
but will nevertheless work out for you (the glass
is half-full) is the main trait predicting
whether you are happy. - Your health, social position, and your income
matter somewhat, but not that much. - The main theory for the discrepancy between what
makes us happy and what we seem to desire and
chase after were thrill seekers un-able to
anticipate that a buzz will wear off (Rabin,
1998).
10Economics and happiness what can be said about
the benefits (happiness or otherwise) of economic
growth?
- Comparing my life to that of my parents
generation, I cannot but be impressed by the very
much more fortunate circumstances in which my
adult life has been lived -
- (pg. 22, autobiography F. Gruen).
111995/2000 World Value survey findings
12The ISSP 2002 data (mainly OECD)
13Gains from income at the bottom Russia
Life satisfaction (0-4)
14Gains versus no-gains when East (poor) met West
(rich)?
15And no-gains at the top far West?
16Other benefits to economic development
(2002-2005)?
17Murder rates?
18And overall level of conflict after WW2 deaths
per year?
19Ambivalent aspects of development
20Interpretation
- A clear national happiness gain from income at
the bottom. No noticeable gain from economic
growth after around 15000 a year. - Other benefits of growth (rule of law, life
expectancy, literacy rate, reduced murder rate)
also disappear around 20000. - With growth beyond 20000, we see continued
increases in energy consumption and pressure on
nature. From about 10,000 we see
below-replacement fertility rates. - Australia should thus not expect much notice-able
benefit of further economic growth.
21Why the lack of happiness gain?
- Main explanations in the literature
- Individuals adapt (the hedonic treadmill
Brinckman and Cambell 1972). - Masses of laboratory evidence.
- Economic evidence the answer to the question
What level of income would you say is good
goes up almost as much as income in about 20
Western countries where the question was posed. - Whilst at the bottom, money buys necessities, at
the top it mainly buys status, which is a
so-called positional good - the more one person, household, region, or even
country has, the less the other has there is no
net gain of status. Indeed, the status race may
crowd out social relations.
22A best-guess of what a happiness maximising
country would look like.
- One becomes much more careful in proffering
advice if there is a possibility that it might be
taken (Fred, page 18). - It would be a moderately rich and optimistic
place where people are lead to believe some
greater power is looking out for them. - It would probably have a lot of drug use,
especially in the last stages of life (the
prozac nation going out on a high). - Wealth, status races, use of natural resources,
and excessive mobility (migrants are relatively
unhappy and have severed social relations) would
be heavily taxed to minimise their negative
externalities. Leisure would be untaxed. - Change and strife would be kept at a minimum.
23A final contention and a question
- Contention weve reach the end of what economic
growth can buy us in terms of desirable outcomes
(happiness, longevity, and safety). From now on,
economic growth seems a race between increased
pressure on natural resources (leading to climate
change and reduced Earth Carrying Capacity) and
reduced fertility (saving us by making us rare
before we destroy ourselves). - Implication for economics as a moral science at
the top end of the PPP scale, its no longer about
growth. Its about making sure people dont have
incentives to inflict negative effects on others
(via use of resources, status races, spreading
fear). - Question to the audience why do we (most
citizens / politicians / scientists) so warmly
support economic growth? Is it really out of
empathy with a rich fellow Australian who can
afford another yacht?