1 – 2 of 2
Blogger tomtom said...

Maybe not an appropriate comment but it is related anyway and I like you guys to know.

This is an excerpt of an article by Paul de Beer that appeared in the Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad April 8th regarding various protest around Europe about the social economic situation in some countries.

European protesters are right: Happiness is more important than money.

In the past years, more and more economists came to the conclusion that economic growth doesn't make people more happy. That is if a country reaches a respectable level of prosperity. Happiness clearly increases parallel to the income until it reaches BNP ( 23000 US in The Netherlands) Above this amount the bond between income level and level of happiness disappears gradually.

In his book " Happiness" UK economist Richard Layard comes with the following explanation that was put forward roughly 30 years ago by Dutch economist Bernard van Praag. Money will only bring happiness to people if they have more of it: more money than others, more money than in the past.

There will be no enduring happiness when everybody gets the same increase in income. The relative income level remains the same. A general increase in income may make people more happy for a short while, but evaportes when we get used to to the new income level.

For individuals it is significant to to improve their position in regard to others or to the past because it will generate more happiness. And when they are successful that happiness will cost others part of theirs. So the total happiness balance will remain zero or even go into a negative value since getting behind is valued worse then taking a lead.

This all resulted in the notorious rat race with all its negative impact. But the majority in Europe choose to have a society that is more a solidarity one and egalitarian even when that means less economical growth.

European politicians and policy makers clearly have a different view right now but if they are wise they should not ignore the signals from this society.

TomTom, Fearless Navigator

Monday, April 10, 2006

Blogger qrswave said...

Thanks for sharing, TomTom.

There are two very important things to note in this analysis. First, the main factor propelling people to earn more money is so that they can compare favorably to their neighbor. Having more money than you had in the past is not a big motivator, except as compared to another's rate of progress. The main impetus here is vanity, or arrogance - the belief that you are better than others.

Second, the reason why one man's gain is another man's loss springs directly from the priniple upon which our economies are based - exploitation.

For starters, our monetary system is exploitative through the use of private debt creation plus interest, and our corporate legal system is exploitative inasmuch as it allows and indeed encourages profiteering on the part of shareholders and executives at the expense of workers and the evironment.

So, we've identified two principal evils (1) arrogance or vanity that keeps us perpetually focused on having more power/control/material possessions than the next person; and (2) legal relationships that permit/ encourage exploitation by the powerful of the vulnerable.

Voila! We end up with a self-propelled cannibalistic system, voracious and unsustainable in character. It's no wonder everyone's unhappy.

Monday, April 10, 2006

You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

This blog does not allow anonymous comments.

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.
Please prove you're not a robot