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Jeffrey Sachs

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America and the Pursuit of Happiness

Posted: 08/30/2011 11:40 am

America is a country of vast wealth and vast anxiety. America's high Gross National Product per person, around $50,000, and its vast net worth, around $500,000 per household, are among the highest in the world. Yet growing numbers of Americans are unhappy, unhealthy, and increasingly pessimistic. America fought for independence to secure the inalienable right to the pursuit of happiness, but today happiness seems out of reach to tens of millions of Americans.

One reason is obvious. The income and wealth measures refer to averages, while inequality of income and wealth has reached all-time highs in our country. Wealth may be soaring, but since the top 1% of wealthy households have more net worth than the bottom 90% its not surprising that not everybody is thrilled. As the top 0.01% of households (about 14,000) receives more income than the poorest 25 million households, can we be surprised that the mood today is not over the top?

Yet there is something even deeper underway. In America today, the quest for profits has crowded out almost every other value. Corporations own our politicians, sports stadiums, charter schools, mass media, and even much of our military. The logic of the corporation has become the logic of America, to the point that the Supreme Court can no longer tell the difference between free speech and untrammeled corporate power.

America is threatened with something even greater than the loss of democracy as corporate power and corporate-owned mass media come to dominate our lives. We are at risk of losing our values as well, and even the birthright to the pursuit of happiness. GNP may be way up over the past thirty years, but social trust, honesty, and compassion are down.

The time has come to reconsider the basic sources of happiness in economic life, not just for a better distribution of income and wealth, though we need that, but also for a better distribution of values, ethics, and goals. Economic progress is important and can greatly improve the quality of life, but only if it is pursued sensibly in line with other goals in the society.

There is a small and beautiful country on the other side of the planet that can help America, and the rest of the world, to regain our bearings in an overbearing age: the Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan. Forty years ago, Bhutan's fourth king, a young and newly installed leader, made a remarkable statement, that Bhutan should pursue Gross National Happiness rather than Gross National Product. Since then, the country has been experimenting with an alternative approach to development, one that takes a holistic approach, putting emphasis not only on economic growth, but also on culture, mental health, social values, compassion, and community.

Dozens of world experts on economy and society recently gathered in Bhutan's capital, Thimphu, to take stock of the evidence on these issues. I was honored to co-host this meeting with Bhutan's remarkable Prime Minister Jigme Thinley, a world leader in sustainable development and great champion of the concept of Gross National Happiness. We assembled in the wake of a recent UN declaration calling on nations to examine the ways that national policies can measure and promote happiness in each society.

The question we examined is how to achieve happiness in the world today, a world that is characterized by rapid urbanization, mass commercial media, global capitalism, and environmental degradation. How can economic life be re-ordered to recreate a sense of community, trust, and environmental sustainability? Here are some of the initial conclusions.

First, there is a real role for economic development in raising happiness. When people are hungry, deprived of basic needs such as clean water, health care, and education, and without meaningful employment, they suffer. Economic development in order to alleviate poverty is a vital step in raising happiness in each society.

Second, however, the relentless pursuit of GNP to the exclusion of other goals is no path to happiness. In the United States, GNP has risen sharply in the past forty years, but happiness has not. Social trust has collapsed. The prevalence of clinical depression appears to be rising. The mass media have become outlets for corporate propaganda, much of it directly anti-scientific, and Americans suffer from an increasing range of consumer addictions.

Third, happiness is achieved through a kind of balanced approach to life, both as individuals and as a society. It is one thing to organize economic policies to support a rise in living standards, but quite another to subordinate all the rest of society's values to the pursuit of profit.

Fourth, modern life provides many direct threats to happiness. Global capitalism is destroying the natural environment through climate change and other kinds of pollution, yet many people are unaware of this as a result of relentless corporate propaganda by Big Oil. Global capitalism is undermining democratic values when companies buy up the politicians. Social trust is on the wane, and many people are suffering extreme anxieties and clinical depression in the anonymity of today's urban and suburban communities.

The market economy is fostering an explosion of advertising that is causing us to lose our balance as consumers. Consider, for example, how the fast-food industry uses oils, fats, sugar, and other addictive ingredients to create unhealthy dependency on foods that contribute to obesity. Now one third of all Americans are obese, far ahead of the rest of the world. Mass advertising is contributing to many other kinds of consumer addictions as well.

Fifth, to promote happiness, we must measure it and identify the many factors other than GNP that can raise or lower society's wellbeing. Most countries invest heavily to measure GNP, but spend little to identify the sources of poor health (like fast foods and excessive TV watching), the reasons for the decline in social trust, and the causes of environmental degradation.

With the world increasingly unstable and dangerous, the time has come to regain our balance and moderation. The mad pursuit of corporate profits is threatening us all. Yes, we should of course support economic growth and development, but in a broader context: one that promotes social trust, compassion, business honesty, the environment, and ultimately our happiness. The beautiful mountain kingdom of Bhutan is helping to shed light on these critical challenges to our global society.


Adapted from the Project Syndicate.

 
 
 

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06:59 AM on 09/06/2011
You can have too much of a good thing as needs can easily be satiated where there is abundance and then there is a negative effect. Guilt over it is the first wake up call to start living more simply.
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sfm123
05:48 PM on 09/05/2011
Great article and so well written. Happy to see someone talking about the mental stability of our population...."The prevalence of clinical depression appears to be rising."
I have been saying lately that 'that the earth and those that dwell therein'' are in the middle of a nervous breakdown.
It's time to begin the very difficult work of re-focusing on the things that really matter in life...to find that delicate balance between internal and external wealth. It's not either/or ..it's and/and..the key is to find the balance.
12:16 PM on 08/31/2011
Happiness over gdp, what a concept!
12:15 PM on 08/31/2011
Karl Marx had it right. Capitalism is an amoral and insatiable beast. Left to its own devices and following the simple but inherent imperative to grow profits, it must cut costs of labor by any means possible. It must pursue foreign labor markets. It must grow an ever larger pool of unemployed to drive down any upward pressure to increase wages. It must fight for reduction of taxes or increase in tax privaledge to out-perform competitors.

Social Security and other New Deal measures as well as those promulgated during the Great Society were created to counter the potential of a disatisfied electorate that could turn on the voracious interests of capitalism. Today corporations seem to have no fear of the consequences that are inevitable. Regardless of its many virtues for creating efficient markets, the unchecked insatiability of the beast is detined to cycle into complete collapse. With much of the elctorate having been co-opted by corporate media and well heeled special interest groups buying an ever increasing advertising presence, the process is moving unencumbered towards a very steep cliff. We can't seem to sustain the most basic measures that would serve to stabilise the system. Many simply point to the current condition as the end of the American hegemony but it actually is the natural end of the a cycle predetermined only by the designs of our economic system
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Rahm11219
11:33 AM on 08/31/2011
I think this is fantastic. Truly well written
08:57 AM on 08/31/2011
Spot on. Ironically, Republicans the self-procalimed "party of values" have -- since Reagan -- pushed an essentially amoral notion of GDP and corporatism over all else. The result, of course, is a blind pursuit of "stuff" in the mistaken notion that more stuff will somehow make us happier.

It doesn't and it hasn't, but it has been good for the Republican's patrons -- big business and the ultra wealthy.
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Weareonenow
Your Reality is a function of your mental software
08:54 AM on 08/31/2011
Great article but it will fall on deaf ears or should i say heavily pre wired brains unable to see beyond the fog of fear and greed.

The system is broken and no longer relevant to the needs of a more empathetic, social and more right brained world. this financial system based on greed fear and might is right is not much different to that practiced by the cavemen.
Until there is an intellectual and moral revolution in America nothing will change, until then Welcome to the Brave New World!
08:48 AM on 08/31/2011
America, as someone looking in from the outside, I urge you to listen to this man.
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Mark MacDonald
Pass the Scotch
07:50 AM on 08/31/2011
For too many Americans monetary wealth and happiness have become increasingly the same. People take jobs with no consideration of whether either the purpose of that job is something that will bring happiness to their lives or the company they go to work for is one they feel comfortable with morally. When I went off to college my father instructed me to study a topic that I would enjoy studying and that I could worry about finding a job when I graduated. I studied English and literature. I took a job teaching the very same subjects to high school students and never regretted it. In the classroom I found great happiness and wealth. This is simple stuff: find something you love and do it as best as you can. You cannot help but succeed.
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Eileenla
Author, "Sacred Economics"
07:20 AM on 08/31/2011
I love it! We need a new metric for the modern world, one that supplants endless growth and consumption with something more sustainable and life affirming. Let's shoot for happiness - after all, isn't that the dream of our founding fathers?
12:58 AM on 08/31/2011
Very nice little article, but nothing will stop the juggernaut of the "Free Market" (sic) Money God, except extinction of the species. Towards that goal we are hurtling. Those in the first class cabins will party 'til the end. And then it's too late. Glug, glug, glug.
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R.W. Sanders
Numerous questions, too little expertise
12:44 AM on 08/31/2011
I always thought that one great thing about this country was that we would accept and honor the rich, as long as it was a two way street, and they would give back in return for living peacefully among the rest of us. But a number (not all) of the rich have gone back on their bargain, they have forgotten that they have to give back. They have only been taking and have convinced themselves it is ok because they are still generating profit. They have confused profit with approval and value. Profit is only one measurement of a person, and wealth is measured in many ways that have nothing to do with money. But there is a greedy class that have overstepped their bounds, and they need to be pulled back to reality.
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Sarah Trickey
love, luck and lollipops. Narf!
12:25 AM on 08/31/2011
Thank you, Mr. Sachs.
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Brian Novotny
What happened to Democracy?
12:16 AM on 08/31/2011
We, or many in this nation has already lost their values. American Idol and Survivor are now national icons and the most popular TV shows, along with Jersey Shores, Kate Plus 8 and other pure garbage. The elections are now like popularity contests like American Idol. Bumper stickers with The one with the most toys wins are cool. Everyone wants to be a billionaire at any costs. We are becoming a nation of narcissists to say the least. Take a look at the seven deadly sins and tell me that they don't describe our 'new' society to a tee.

1. Lust
2. Gluttony
3, Greed
4. Sloth
5. Wrath
6. Envy
7. Pride

They are running rampant in our society today, brought about by media and corporate sponsored commercialism. We are now on the highway to h-eII, or all aboard the crazy train. Not sure if there will be any turning back at this point anymore.
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kamact
Market Observer
11:50 PM on 08/30/2011
I totally agree,...the current misdirection is towards Corperica,...our new nation form by and for corporations.....Like one big corporate town.
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R.W. Sanders
Numerous questions, too little expertise
12:59 AM on 08/31/2011
I have to question our education system. Are we creating thinking, feeling, creative people; or are we creating money making robots? There is nothing wrong with making money and making a living for your family, and even getting rich. But there is something wrong with ignoring all else, and evolving an inability to put yourself into the other guy's shoes. Wealth without empathy is useless.