Bentham from the Crypt Once More: Politicians in Pursuit of Happiness
Published By: CGD on eSS | Published Date: June, 21 , 2011There is a burgeoning academic literature on happiness polls that has used a range of different
measures and approaches across countries rich and poor alike to answer the question, “what makes
people say they are happy?”
The excitement surrounding this work is well justified. These polls suggest an idea of happiness that
would be broadly understood by philosophers from Aristotle to Mill to Rawls or Parfit. Happiness studies
also suggest some potential reasons why we appear to act irrationally according to the dictates of
revealed-preference-utility-maximization. Subjective-well-being (SWB) polls also help to illustrate some
of the absurdities of taking income per capita as our measure of the ultimate good.
At the same time, a lot of things we surely care about are not reflected in SWB poll answers. Crosscountry
studies involving economies and societies at distinctly different levels of development suggest
a limited role for income, rights, health and social factors all combined in explaining SWB. And all
the usual criticisms of and concerns with utilitarianism apply to SWB polls.
Polls do not capture a be-all and end-all measure of the good. Both because of the difficulty of interpreting
SWB evidence with regard to SWB-maximizing policy and because it appears clear that SWB (on
whichever measure) is probably not what we want to maximize, considerable caution is required in
the use of such polls for policymaking. URL:[www.cgdev.org/content/publications/detail/1425209].
Author(s): Charles Kenny | Posted on: Jul 21, 2011 | Views(1122) | Download (703)