“Every day, in every industrialized country of the world, journalists and politicians give
out a conscious and unconscious message. It is that better economic performance means
more happiness for a nation. This idea is rarely questioned. We feel we would be more
cheery if our boss raised our pay, and assume that countries must be roughly the same.
The results in this paper suggest that, in a developed nation, economic progress buys
only a small amount of extra happiness.“ (Oswald 1997, p. 1827)
Based on Oswald’s introductory statement, this paper is going further than refuting the assumption that a
certain kind of utility is solely contingent on absolute earnings. With the interpretation
of utility as happiness, it would mean for the aggregate economy as well as for the
individual that income secures happiness with a rising tendency. Having started with
Oswald, another economist with well-known findings has to be made mention of:
Richard Easterlin, who constructed the hypothesis that from a certain threshold of
developmental achievements on, economic growth is of minor significance to the overall
life satisfaction of a nation. The so-called Easterlin paradox originally arose as data on
richer citizens within a country displayed a higher level of subjective well-being and led
to the assumption that “economic growth improve[s] the human lot” (Easterlin 1974).
Nevertheless, a comparison amongst well-developed states and over time revealed that
there’s little difference of each population with regard to happiness. Thus, it appears
that not the absolute but relative wealth is of import to life satisfaction in crossindividual
and cross-stratum comparisons. Even though it never gained as much
attention as its foreshadowing counterpart by Easterlin, the phenomenon is also
denoted as the “relative deprivation theory” (Oswald 1999, p. 360), pointing out the
state of deprived happiness poorer individuals in a society suffer.
Table of Content
1. Introduction
2. Economic growth and happiness
2.1 Happiness
2.2 The Easterlin paradox
2.2.1 Within-country comparisons
2.2.2 Cross-country comparisons
2.2.3 Time-series data
2.2.4 Conclusion
2.3 Social comparison and relative income hypothesis
2.4 Adaptation effect and hedonic treadmill
2.5 Conclusion
3. Alternatives to the neoclassical growth paradigm
3.1 Neoclassical economics and the growth model
3.2 Jevon's paradox and uneconomic growth
3.3 Dematerialization and decoupling
3.4 Economic degrowth, developed nations and policy implications
4. Degrowth policy and prosperity
4.1 Government and policy
4.2 Feasibility of degrowth and social change
4.3 Normativity, sustainability accounts and institutions
5. Conclusion
6. Bibliography
7. Other sources
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