Notre Dame University political scientistBenjamin Radcliff argues that market-orient-ed societies are by nature corrosive to happi-ness and that large welfare states are the rem-edy. Publishing in his field’s most prominent journal, Radcliff claims that the accumulateddata suggest:Life satisfaction should increase as wemove from less to more social democra-tic welfare states. More generally, lifesatisfaction should vary positively withthe dominance in government of politi-cal parties committed to the socialdemocratic program of limiting humandependence on the market.
9
Elsewhere Radcliff argues that “the more wesupplement the cold efficiency of the free mar-ket system with interventions that reducepoverty, insecurity and inequality, the more weimprove the quality of life.”
10
Like Layard,Nesse, and Radcliff, many others believe it hasbeen established that certain policies—policiesthat would make the United States more likeSweden or France—would enhance our happi-ness. “The utilitarian argument for the rich giv-ing more of their money to the poor is now sci-entifically irrefutable,” writes Geoffrey Miller,“but few journalists have recognized that revo-lutionary implication.”
11
Swarthmore Collegepsychologist Barry Schwartz, writing in the
New Republic
, says that thanks to happinessresearch “we now
know
there is some signifi-cant subset of people likely to be made betteroff through heavier taxation, and that thesepeople reside at the top end of the wealth dis-tribution.” Schwartz continues:Given that a concern for people’s welfarehas traditionally been one of the chief moral objections to taxing wealth (atleast among those sympathetic to redis-tribution in principle), a policy of heaviertaxation for the very wealthy may be theonly moral course of action.
12
An article on happiness research in the
NewYork Times
reports that George Loewenstein, a leader in “behavioral economics” at CarnegieMellon University, “doesn’t see how anybody could study happiness and not find himself leaning left politically.”
13
Perhaps the most compelling left-leaningarguments based on happiness research arethose, such as Robert Frank’s in his book
Luxury Fever
, which de-emphasize the impor-tance of
absolute
material wealth to happinessand stress instead the importance of
relative
position in the distribution of income andsocial status. Whereas happiness research hasshown a flat trend in happiness
over time
, italso shows that
at any time
wealthier people aremore likely to say they are happy. However, sothe argument goes, if we
all
run harder to pullahead in the race for the benefits of higher rel-ative standing, those ahead will just run hard-er too. In the end, the frantic pace will have leftus all harried and exhausted, and average hap-piness will have remained unchanged.“Every time [some people] raise their rela-tive income (which they like),” Layard writes,“they lower the relative income of other people(which those people dislike). This is an ‘exter-nal disbenefit’ imposed on others, a form of physical pollution.”
14
Layard’s proposed solu-tion is a tax on “the polluting activity” or, aseconomists call it, the “negative externality.”The polluting activity here is nothing less thanyour and my working hard to make moremoney. But, if it is
relative
standing that mat-ters, the increase in total wealth will notincrease happiness on average. There willalways be a top half and bottom half. A taxthat reduces the monetary benefits of laborand so encourages everyone to ease up in uni-son will slow the pace of life and reduceincomes. This, the argument goes, will do noharm to happiness, but the time and energy freed to pursue the pleasures of family, friends,and leisure will do a world of good.If we must push ourselves ever hardermerely to keep up, then it is easy to suspectthat the output of increased economic pro-duction will not actually contribute to ourhappiness. We end up with nothing but super-fluous abundance, the side-effect of a maddash that does nothing but wear us down and
3
Like Layard,Nesse, andRadcliff, many believe thatcertain policies—policies thatwould make theUnited Statesmore like Swedenor France—wouldenhance ourhappiness.
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