Not at all what I might have guessed you would say.
I didn't guess, BTW, but did suppose that you would
be upbeat about the article. Turns out this was not the case.
 
For myself, I get your point but also think that Samuelson
is at least as right as he is wrong.  To combine your's and his  views,
in other words before we can measure what we really want to measure
we need a philosophy   --a set of definitions and working  hypotheses
that make good sense--  which can guide our investigation.  Otherwise
we start with assumptions and may never get beyond those that
really are false.
 
I'd also add that "happiness" is fluid, not static. I've been both happy  
and sad
at times of much social interaction and at times of limited social  
interaction.
It depends.
 
So we need a calculus, not an algebraic formula.
 
Billy
 
===================================
 
 
4/16/2012 1:05:05 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Boy,  what a sourpuss.  


Sure, measuring happiness is overly simplistic and prone to abuse. But so  
are *all* measurements, and economic ones are pretty horrible.


A healthy debate about happiness -- or alternative metrics -- is a very  
good thing.  The thing we need to guard against is becoming overly  dogmatic 
about definitions, not the mere attempt to measure things that  matter.


E


On Apr 16, 2012, at 12:03 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
wrote:










 
The global happiness  derby

 
 
 
By _Robert J. Samuelson_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/robert-j-samuelson/2011/02/24/ABSZV8O_page.html) 
, 
Published: April 15, 2012
The Washington Post 

 
 
<ARTIC
“Happy families are all alike; every unhappy  family is unhappy in its own 
way.” 
— Leo Tolstoy, “Anna  Karenina”



 
We ought to leave “happiness” to novelists and philosophers — and rescue  
it from the economists and psychologists who think it can be distilled into  
a “science” and translated into pro-happiness policies. Fat chance.  
Government can often mitigate sources of unhappiness (starvation,  
unemployment, 
disease), but happiness is more than the absence of misery. If  we could 
manufacture happiness, we could repeal the “human condition.” 
Somehow this has escaped the social scientists who want to make happiness  
the goal of government. They argue that economic output (gross domestic  
product) doesn’t measure everything that’s important in life — family,  
friends or religion, for example. True, but it doesn’t follow that  “happiness” 
can be targeted as an alternative. No matter. Their latest brief  is the “
_World Happiness Report_ 
(http://www.earth.columbia.edu/sitefiles/file/Sachs%20Writing/2012/World%20Happiness%20Report.pdf)
 ,” which ranks  countries by 
their “subjective well-being” (the technical label for  happiness) as 
recorded by public opinion surveys. 
On the most comprehensive list, the United States ranks 11th out of 156  
countries. Here are the top 10 and their populations: Denmark, 5.6 million;  
Finland, 5.4 million; Norway, 5 million; Netherlands, 16.7 million; Canada,  
34.8 million; Switzerland, 7.9 million; Sweden, 9.5 million; New Zealand,  
4.4 million; Australia, 22.9 million; and Ireland, 4.6 million.  
All these countries share one common characteristic: They’re small in  
population and, except Canada and Australia, land mass. Small countries  enjoy 
an advantage in the happiness derby. They’re more likely to have  homogeneous 
populations with fewer ethnic, religious and geographic  conflicts. This 
minimizes one potentially large source of unhappiness. Among  big countries, 
the United States ranks first.  
The irony is that Europe, where the happiness movement is strongest,  
generally registers lower happiness. On the same ranking, the United Kingdom  
(18) is the leading large European nation, followed by Spain (22), France  
(23), Italy (28) and Germany (30). 
 
The high U.S. ranking may reflect national character. “A person who  smiles 
a lot is either a fool or an American,” says a Russian adage cited by  
historian _Peter N. Stearns_ 
(http://hbr.org/2012/01/the-history-of-happiness/ar/1)  of George Mason 
University in the  Harvard Business Review. Only in the 
mid-1700s — the Enlightenment — did  happiness become socially acceptable, 
Stearns notes. Before that, religious  dogma encouraged austere rectitude. 
European cultures formed before the  change; America’s didn’t.  
The relationship between economic growth and happiness is controversial.  
In 1974, economist Richard Easterlin of the University of Southern  
California published a study arguing that (a) within countries, the middle  
class and 
rich reported being happier than the poor; but (b) as countries  became 
richer, reported happiness didn’t increase. This was dubbed the “_Easterlin 
Paradox_ 
(http://tutor2u.net/blog/index.php/economics/comments/qa-what-is-the-easterlin-paradox/)
 .” One theory is that people grow  accustomed to higher 
incomes and compare themselves with those around them.  If everyone gets 
richer, people at the bottom remain less happy. 
 
Well, if economic growth doesn’t make people  happier, what’s the point? 
The happiness movement is often anti-growth. Yes,  the poorest countries need 
growth to relieve misery. But otherwise, “the  lifestyles of the rich 
imperil the survival of the poor,” writes Columbia  University economist 
Jeffrey 
Sachs in the happiness report. “Climate change  is already hitting the 
poorest regions.” 
This sounds reasonable but isn’t. There are two flaws. First, the  
Easterlin Paradox may be untrue. A _recent study_ 
(http://bpp.wharton.upenn.edu/jwolfers/Papers/EasterlinParadox.pdf)  by 
economists Justin  Wolfers and Betsey 
Stevenson of the University of Pennsylvania found that  higher economic 
growth does raise happiness in most countries. Second, even  if the Easterlin 
Paradox survives (economists are quarreling), growth is  essential to 
maintaining existing happiness. 
 
Look at the European Union. As its growth has dropped, unemployment has  
risen to 10.2 percent. And unemployment reduces well-being, says the  
happiness report, through lower income and the “loss of social status,  
self-esteem, 
[and] workplace social life.” 
All rich societies already try to balance economic growth with social  
justice, security and environmental progress. The happiness movement would  
merely impose more intervention. It “boils down to having zealous  politicians 
regulate the rest of us into their version of happiness,” _argues Marc De 
Vos_ 
(http://www.itinerainstitute.org/upl/1/en/doc/dp_1_uk_final%20versionfor%20website_uk.pdf)
  of the Itinera  Institute, a Belgian think tank. 
Creating an impossible goal — universal happiness — also condemns  
government to failure. Happiness depends on too much that is uncontrollable.  
For 
starters, personality. We all know people who seem blessed — stable  
marriage, healthy children, successful job — who are restless, grumpy and  
sometimes 
depressed. Meanwhile, others plagued by misfortune — sickness,  shaky 
finances, family disappointment — persevere and remain upbeat. 
Contradictions abound. Freedom, the ability to choose, is also essential  
to well-being, says the happiness report. But freedom permits people to do  
self-destructive things that reduce happiness.  
The “pursuit of happiness” may be a “right,” as the Declaration of  
Independence says. But the achievement of happiness is not an entitlement.  The 
happiness movement is at best utopian; at worst, it’s silly and  oppressive. 



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-- 
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