The general rule is that experiences make people happier than things. A trip to Hawaii, for example, trumps a BMW M5. But things can also sometimes contribute to happiness:
before [one economist] scoffs at Gillette's latest five-blade shaving system, he should recall Benjamin Franklin's belief that teaching a young man to shave, and keeping his blade sharp, would contribute more to his happiness than giving him 1,000 guineas to squander.The other interesting bit is on social competition. Humans, like many primates, don't just want to be happy. Part of happiness is to be at the top of the pecking order, to be better than our peers, a condition some sociologists call "affluenza." In the Overspent American, Juliet Schor also notes that affluenza is worse in modern times, where television allows us to have peers that are substantially better off than our actual social group, putting even more pressure to one-up.
Anyway, it's good to know that economists are getting down to the issue of what makes us happy, and understanding that not all marketplace decisions are rational, happiness-maximizers.
1 comment:
Daniel Gilbert makes excellent points regarding this matter in his book "Stumbling on Happiness". These points might be summed up as: A person is bad at predicting what will make him happy in the future. Because of the way his brain works, he will not improve much, even with this knowledge.
I couldn't recommend reading the entire book, however, unless you are (1) willing to put up with bad jokes and other nonsense to make the book "suitable for a general audience" and (2) prepared to be accused of being a depressive by anyone who sees the book in your hand.
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