25 Aug 2007, ST
New studies on happiness are focusing on more objective questions like freedom from fear and having choices
AMSTERDAM - The tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan long ago dispensed with the notion of Gross National Product as a gauge of well-being. The king decreed that his people would aspire to Gross National Happiness instead.
That kernel of Buddhist wisdom is increasingly finding an echo in international policy and development models, which seek to establish scientific methods for finding out what makes us happy and why.
New research institutes are being created at venerable universities like Oxford and Cambridge to establish methods of judging individual and national well-being. Governments are putting ever greater emphasis on promoting mental well-being - not just treating mental illness.
'In much the same way that research of consumer unions helps you to make the best buy, happiness research can help you make the best choices,' said Dr Ruut Veenhoven, who created the World Database of Happiness in 1999.
When he started studying happiness in the 1960s, he used data from social researchers who simply asked people how satisfied they were with their lives, on a scale of zero to 10. But as the discipline has matured and gained popularity in the past decade, self-reporting has been found lacking.
By their own estimate, 'drug addicts would measure happy all the time', said Dr Sabina Alkire of the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Institute, which began work on May 30.
New studies add more objective questions into a mix of feel-good factors: education, nutrition, freedom from fear and violence, gender equality and perhaps most importantly, having choices.
'People's ability to be an agent, to act on behalf of what matters to them, is fundamental,' said Dr Alkire.
But if people say money can't buy happiness, they're only partially right.
Dr Veenhoven's database, which lists 95 countries, is headed by Denmark with a rating of 8.2, followed by Switzerland, Austria, Iceland and Finland, all countries with high per capita income. At the other end of the scale are much poorer countries: Tanzania rated 3.2, behind Zimbabwe, Moldova, Ukraine and Armenia.
The United States just makes it into the top 15 with a 7.4 index rating. While choice is abundant in America, nutrition and violence issues helped drag its rating down.
Wealth counts, but most studies of individuals show that income disparities count more. Surprisingly, however, citizens are no happier in welfare states, which strive to mitigate the distortions of capitalism than in purer free-market economies.
'In the beginning, I didn't believe my eyes,' said Dr Veenhoven of his data.
'Icelanders are just as happy as Swedes, yet their country spends half what Sweden does (per capita) on social welfare.'
In emphasising personal freedom as a root of happiness, Dr Alkire cited her study of women in the southern Indian state of Kerala, which showed that poor women who make their own choices score highly compared with women with strict fathers or husbands.
Adrian G. White, of the University of Leicester, included twice as many countries as Dr Veenhoven in his Global Projection of Subjective Well-being, which also measures the correlation of happiness and wealth. He, too, led his list with Denmark, Switzerland and Austria.
Bhutan, where less than half the people can read or write and 90 per cent are subsistence farmers, ranks No. 8 in his list of happy nations. Its notion of GNH is based on equitable development, environmental conservation, cultural heritage and good governance.
US researchers have found other underlying factors: Married people are more content than singles, but having children does not raise happiness levels; education and IQ seem to have little impact; attractive people are only slightly happier than the unattractive; the elderly - over 65 - are more satisfied with their lives than the young; friendships are crucial.
But the research also shows that many people are simply disposed to being either happy or disgruntled, and as much as 50 per cent of the happiness factor is genetic. Like body weight, moods can swing only so much from their natural 'set point'. So can you do anything about it? Some educators say you can.
People 'can be taught emotional resilience, self control, the habits of optimism, handling negative thoughts and much else', Anthony Seldon, Tony Blair's biographer and the headmaster of Wellington College in Britain, wrote recently in the Financial Times.
Seldon is developing happiness courses, working with the Institute of Well-being at Cambridge which was founded last November.
One recent book seeking to cash in on the well-being craze bears the English title Dutch Women Don't Get Depressed, though it's written in Dutch.
Dr Veenhoven says the title is off base: Statistically, women get depressed more often than men, and Dutch women aren't happier than others in the wealthy West.
He says that with the right combination of individual choices and government policy, nations can raise their happiness quotient by as much as 5 per cent.
In an influential 2004 academic paper, Martin Seligman, the University of Pennsylvania psychologist credited with launching the positive psychology movement in 1998, and Ed Diener of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign encouraged policymakers to consider more than economic development in their planning.
'Although economic output has risen steeply over the past decades, there has been no rise in life satisfaction during this period, and there has been a substantial increase in depression and distrust,' they wrote.
British opposition leader David Cameron recently established a Quality of Life Policy Group to examine ways governments can legislate to boost national contentment levels. 'It's time we admitted that there's more to life than money, and it's time we focused not just on GDP, but on GWB - general well-being,' he said in a speech last year.
Even experts acknowledge the difficulty of assigning numerical scales to feelings, and they are still grappling with how best to refine definitions.
At Cambridge's Institute of Well-being, another group has expanded the standard happiness questionnaire to 50 items, and is incorporating it into a European Social Survey of 50,000 people.
It aims to weigh not only personal feelings ('I'm always optimistic about my future'), but how people function ('I feel I am free to decide for myself how to live my life') and their relationships with others ('To what extent do you feel that people in your local area help one another?').
'Happiness is more complicated than we originally thought,' said Dr Alkire.
AP
New studies on happiness are focusing on more objective questions like freedom from fear and having choices
AMSTERDAM - The tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan long ago dispensed with the notion of Gross National Product as a gauge of well-being. The king decreed that his people would aspire to Gross National Happiness instead.
That kernel of Buddhist wisdom is increasingly finding an echo in international policy and development models, which seek to establish scientific methods for finding out what makes us happy and why.
New research institutes are being created at venerable universities like Oxford and Cambridge to establish methods of judging individual and national well-being. Governments are putting ever greater emphasis on promoting mental well-being - not just treating mental illness.
'In much the same way that research of consumer unions helps you to make the best buy, happiness research can help you make the best choices,' said Dr Ruut Veenhoven, who created the World Database of Happiness in 1999.
When he started studying happiness in the 1960s, he used data from social researchers who simply asked people how satisfied they were with their lives, on a scale of zero to 10. But as the discipline has matured and gained popularity in the past decade, self-reporting has been found lacking.
By their own estimate, 'drug addicts would measure happy all the time', said Dr Sabina Alkire of the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Institute, which began work on May 30.
New studies add more objective questions into a mix of feel-good factors: education, nutrition, freedom from fear and violence, gender equality and perhaps most importantly, having choices.
'People's ability to be an agent, to act on behalf of what matters to them, is fundamental,' said Dr Alkire.
But if people say money can't buy happiness, they're only partially right.
Dr Veenhoven's database, which lists 95 countries, is headed by Denmark with a rating of 8.2, followed by Switzerland, Austria, Iceland and Finland, all countries with high per capita income. At the other end of the scale are much poorer countries: Tanzania rated 3.2, behind Zimbabwe, Moldova, Ukraine and Armenia.
The United States just makes it into the top 15 with a 7.4 index rating. While choice is abundant in America, nutrition and violence issues helped drag its rating down.
Wealth counts, but most studies of individuals show that income disparities count more. Surprisingly, however, citizens are no happier in welfare states, which strive to mitigate the distortions of capitalism than in purer free-market economies.
'In the beginning, I didn't believe my eyes,' said Dr Veenhoven of his data.
'Icelanders are just as happy as Swedes, yet their country spends half what Sweden does (per capita) on social welfare.'
In emphasising personal freedom as a root of happiness, Dr Alkire cited her study of women in the southern Indian state of Kerala, which showed that poor women who make their own choices score highly compared with women with strict fathers or husbands.
Adrian G. White, of the University of Leicester, included twice as many countries as Dr Veenhoven in his Global Projection of Subjective Well-being, which also measures the correlation of happiness and wealth. He, too, led his list with Denmark, Switzerland and Austria.
Bhutan, where less than half the people can read or write and 90 per cent are subsistence farmers, ranks No. 8 in his list of happy nations. Its notion of GNH is based on equitable development, environmental conservation, cultural heritage and good governance.
US researchers have found other underlying factors: Married people are more content than singles, but having children does not raise happiness levels; education and IQ seem to have little impact; attractive people are only slightly happier than the unattractive; the elderly - over 65 - are more satisfied with their lives than the young; friendships are crucial.
But the research also shows that many people are simply disposed to being either happy or disgruntled, and as much as 50 per cent of the happiness factor is genetic. Like body weight, moods can swing only so much from their natural 'set point'. So can you do anything about it? Some educators say you can.
People 'can be taught emotional resilience, self control, the habits of optimism, handling negative thoughts and much else', Anthony Seldon, Tony Blair's biographer and the headmaster of Wellington College in Britain, wrote recently in the Financial Times.
Seldon is developing happiness courses, working with the Institute of Well-being at Cambridge which was founded last November.
One recent book seeking to cash in on the well-being craze bears the English title Dutch Women Don't Get Depressed, though it's written in Dutch.
Dr Veenhoven says the title is off base: Statistically, women get depressed more often than men, and Dutch women aren't happier than others in the wealthy West.
He says that with the right combination of individual choices and government policy, nations can raise their happiness quotient by as much as 5 per cent.
In an influential 2004 academic paper, Martin Seligman, the University of Pennsylvania psychologist credited with launching the positive psychology movement in 1998, and Ed Diener of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign encouraged policymakers to consider more than economic development in their planning.
'Although economic output has risen steeply over the past decades, there has been no rise in life satisfaction during this period, and there has been a substantial increase in depression and distrust,' they wrote.
British opposition leader David Cameron recently established a Quality of Life Policy Group to examine ways governments can legislate to boost national contentment levels. 'It's time we admitted that there's more to life than money, and it's time we focused not just on GDP, but on GWB - general well-being,' he said in a speech last year.
Even experts acknowledge the difficulty of assigning numerical scales to feelings, and they are still grappling with how best to refine definitions.
At Cambridge's Institute of Well-being, another group has expanded the standard happiness questionnaire to 50 items, and is incorporating it into a European Social Survey of 50,000 people.
It aims to weigh not only personal feelings ('I'm always optimistic about my future'), but how people function ('I feel I am free to decide for myself how to live my life') and their relationships with others ('To what extent do you feel that people in your local area help one another?').
'Happiness is more complicated than we originally thought,' said Dr Alkire.
AP
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