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http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,16889149%255E7583,00.html


Johan Norberg: Don't worry, be happy

October 12, 2005 
BELIEF in the future is perhaps the most important value for a free society. It 
is what makes so many interested in getting an education, or investing in a 
project, or being nice to their neighbours. If we think nothing can improve or 
that the world is coming to an end, we don't work hard for a better and more 
civilised future. And we will all be miserable.

Enlightenment philosophers created the belief in the future in the 17th and 
18th centuries by letting us know that our rational faculties can understand 
the world and that with freedom we can improve it. Economic liberalism proved 
them right. When Adam Smith explained that it's not from the benevolence of the 
butcher that we expect our meat but from his self-interest, it was much more 
than an economic statement; it was a world view. It was a way of saying that 
the butcher is not my enemy. By co-operating and exchanging voluntarily, we 
both gain and make the world a better place, step by step. 

Since those days, mankind has made unprecedented progress. We are wealthier, 
healthier and happier than we have ever been. We live longer, we live more 
safely and we live more freely. For every successive generation, we have been 
able to build on the knowledge, technology and wealth of earlier generations, 
and add our own. We have reduced poverty, created more wealth and increased 
life expectancy more in the past 50 years than we did in the past 5000 years. 

I am not just saying that the glass is half full rather than half empty. I am 
saying that it used to be empty. Just 200 years ago, slavery, feudalism and 
tyranny ruled the world. By our standards even the richest countries were 
extremely poor. The average chance of surviving your first year was less than 
the chance of surviving to retirement today. 

The glass is at least half full and it is being filled as we speak. And if I 
had it here before me, I would propose a toast to the creativity and 
persistence of mankind. In other words: Don't worry; be happy! 

But although we are happy, we don't seem to notice, and we do worry. When we 
ask people about what has happened in the world, most say that things get 
worse, poverty is on the increase and nature is being destroyed. Last week I 
published a survey showing that Swedes think all the indicators of living 
standards and the environment that are improving rapidly are in fact 
deteriorating. When we read the papers, we see problems, poverty and disasters. 
Powerful international movements oppose globalisation and capitalism because 
they think they increase misery and hunger. And scholars write books saying 
that we are all sad and depressed. 

American writer Gregg Easterbrook has pointed out that old problems, horrible 
as they were at the time, seem less threatening in retrospect because we know 
that we solved them. But the problems of today are uncertain and unsolved, so 
they stay in our mind. 

A few weeks ago, the first story in the leading news shows on television was 
that there is a "growing environmental threat" in Europe. The problem was 
shipping, which is rapidly becoming the biggest emitter of sulphur dioxide in 
Europe. 

However, if you listened closely to the report, you understood that this was 
not because of growth of emissions from shipping - which grew very modestly - 
but because of a rapid reduction in emissions from other sources. Total sulphur 
dioxide emissions in Europe (including shipping) have been reduced by about 60 
per cent in 15 years. So the real story was one about a dramatic improvement in 
environmental conditions, but shipping was now the thing we have to deal with 
and so it was news. 

I am an optimist. I happen to believe that this perceptual bias is a good 
thing. That's what keeps us alert, so that we solve problems and improve the 
world. But we have to understand that this also means that our minds are 
constantly occupied by problems. And therefore we think the world is worse than 
it is. 

Progress also always creates some new challenge and problem solvers think more 
about the challenges than the progress. We live longer than ever. Isn't that 
fantastic? No, because it results in higher costs for pensions and health care. 
At last poor countries make economic progress. Isn't that wonderful? No, 
because we are afraid that Polish plumbers and Indian programmers will take our 
jobs. There is always something to be scared about. In the 1970s, when 
temperatures were declining, we worried about a new ice age. Now they are 
increasing and we worry about global warming. We used to worry about everybody 
who was depressed, now new antidepressant drugs have reduced suicide in rich 
countries by one-fifth. And so we worry about so many people taking pills. 

The media exploits this interest in problems and disasters. We want to hear the 
latest horrible stories because our Stone Age brains think that this is 
important information on which we must act. At the turn of the millennium, a 
New York University survey made a list of Journalism's Greatest Hits. Would you 
expect news stories about new vaccines, fantastic inventions, the rise in 
living standards or the spread of democracy from 0 per cent of countries 100 
years ago to 60 per cent today? You would have been disappointed. The greatest 
hits were all about war, natural disasters, dangerous chemicals and unsafe 
cars. 

Risks, horrible acts and disasters are easily dramatised and cheap to produce. 
That is why crime is such a popular theme on the news. Studies from the US show 
that the more time people spend watching news on TV, the more they exaggerate 
the extent of crime in their cities. A fascinating study about Baltimore showed 
84 per cent feared that criminals would harm them or their loved ones, but at 
the same time almost everybody - 92 per cent - said they felt safe in their 
neighbourhoods, of which they had first-hand knowledge. They all think there is 
a lot of crime in Baltimore, but they all think it takes place somewhere else 
in the city, in the places they know about only from the media. 

These results appear again and again in surveys. People think that the 
environment is being destroyed, that the economy is going to bits and Germans 
think the reunification of Germany was bad for most people. But they also think 
that their local environment is good, that their personal finances are 
improving and that German reunification was good for their personal situation. 

At the same time that extreme poverty has been cut in half in developing 
countries, many people think poverty is on the increase because they see the 
poverty for the first time on TV. Partly we care about it because poor 
Vietnamese and Chinese make the shirts we wear. If you don't understand the 
context, you think that it is the fact they make our shirts that has made them 
poor. Never mind that people who work for an American multinational in a 
low-income country earn eight times the average income in that country. 

The long-run prospects for the world are amazing. Today we have more people 
living longer lives in freer societies and we have more scientists alive than 
lived in all previous periods combined, and they all get an education that is 
almost as long as a lifetime in earlier periods. Biotechnology, nanotechnology 
and robotics will create vast improvements. We will be richer, we will live 
longer and we will be healthier. Continents that we thought were doomed to 
misery will soon have the living standards we have today. 

Johan Norberg is head of political ideas at Timbro, a Swedish think tank. He is 
author of the best-selling book In Defence of Global Capitalism, which the 
Sydney-based Centre for Independent Studies republished this week. This is an 
edited extract from the 22nd annual John Bonython Lecture in Sydney last night. 

www.cis.org.au


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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