Can government make us happy?
Published February 21, 2019
By John Hood
by John Hood, Syndicated columnist and author, February 18, 2019.
Is it the job of government to make you happy? While it may seem like a straightforward question, there are some important subtleties packed into those few words.
On the face of it, “no” feels like the obvious answer. Our country’s Declaration of Independence states that governments are instituted to secure our rights to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” The first section of our own state constitution uses the same language, while adding that North Carolinians are also entitled to protection of their right “to enjoyment of the fruits of their own labor.”
Under our form of government, you are not entitled to be happy. Nor are you entitled to enjoy the rights of someone else’s labor. You are free to yearn, to strive, to pursue. You may reach your goals, and feel happy about that. Or you may not fully reach your goals, yet derive satisfaction from the attempt and from what you gain along the way.
Governments are obligated, then, only to protect your right to pursue happiness. Simply being unhappy is not a justification for governments using coercion to transfer the fruits of other people’s labors to you.
On the other hand, the tasks governments are constitutionally authorized to do for us — ensure public safety, administer courts, and finance public goods that cannot otherwise be delivered by voluntary means — are obviously related to our happiness. We pay taxes, comply with the law, and otherwise give up some of our personal liberty in order to receive valuable public services. If we don’t get them, or their value is far less than the cost, that understandably makes us unhappy. As government failures increase, that unhappiness turns to anger.
Whether in Washington or in Raleigh, policymakers typically judge public policies according to objective criteria such as the pace of economic growth, changes in personal incomes, levels of educational attainment, or health outcomes. Increasingly, however, some analysts are using measures of public happiness or satisfaction to evaluate what government does (or fails to do).
The technical name for what they are measuring is “subjective wellbeing.” People differ in their preferences, circumstances, and definitions of a life well lived. The best way to gauge how happy or satisfied they feel is to ask them, not to make guesses based on facts external to their personal experience.
When it comes to the optimal size and scope of government, progressives and conservatives clearly disagree. In the North Carolina context, for example, progressives think our state expenditures and taxes are too low to finance necessary public services. Conservatives think North Carolina is closer to getting it right, and that making state government bigger than it is now would cost more than the additional services would be worth.
I’m a conservative, and I often cite studies about economic growth to support my case. But is that really the goal? One might argue that instead of measuring North Carolina’s gross domestic product, we ought to be measuring North Carolina’s gross domestic happiness!
A few researchers have done that kind of analysis. For example, a study by Baylor University political scientist Patrick Flavin, just published in the journal Social Science Research, compared levels of state spending to levels of subjective wellbeing. He found no relationship between overall state spending and residents’ self-reported happiness. He found the same thing for major categories of state spending such as education and public assistance.
However, Flavin did find the states that spent more on true “public goods” — including highways, public safety, libraries, and parks — tended to have higher levels of subjective wellbeing. With true public goods, it is either impossible or prohibitively costly to exclude nonpayers from benefitting from them, and consumption by one person doesn’t significantly reduce the ability of another to consume it.
Taken together with other studies showing a link between economic freedom and subjective wellbeing, I read this evidence as generally consistent with a fiscally conservative approach to public policy. Perhaps you disagree. I’m happy to talk more about it.
John Hood (@JohnHoodNC) is chairman of the John Locke Foundation and appears on “NC SPIN,” broadcast statewide Fridays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 12:30 p.m. on UNC-TV.
https://www.carolinajournal.com/opinion-article/can-government-make-us-happy/
February 25, 2019 at 7:36 pm
Norm Kelly says:
Socialism has 2 driving factors propelling it into more & more minds. No, I won't bring public education into this discussion. This time. That's for another time, though it's obvious.
First, the people in charge of socialism believe they are superior to those who are controlled. Central planners believe they are the only one capable of managing the lives of everyone else. Power is more addictive than the most addictive drug you can think of. People love the feeling power gives them. And when central planners can administer everyone else, not just a small company or a small district, but the entire populace, then their addiction has no limits. Socialism is power for power's sake.
Capitalism allows everyone willing to work to actually succeed. No other system has so much flexibility for so many.
Socialism prevents too many people from succeeding. This is forced by central planners. Make too much, according to the rules of the centralists, you are penalized. In every system other than capitalism the only ones allowed to succeed are the central planners themselves. Everyone else is geared/forced toward mediocrity (at best). Look at any socialist nation in the world and you too will discover, if your mind is truly open, that only a chosen few are successful (financially) while everyone else is kept in the middle or lower class groups. England is one nation that has their ruling class and aristocracy. This group is allowed to be as affluent as they wish. Everyone else is left to divide the spoils among each other. Some people get some, some people get none. Health care is geared toward the central planners, everyone else is left to suffer with what's left over and controlled/regulated/rationed by the planners. English citizens pulling their own teeth. English patients not being able to get x-rays in a timely manner. Elites living outrageous lifestyles while telling the average citizen that they are lucky to get toilet paper (which may be an extreme example on my part, but is often too true in non-capitalist societies).
Socialism's 'benefits' are highly touted by central planners and liberal public schools. Socialism's benefits are repeated by media allies of the planners without question, without investigation, or even a hint of truth from societies that have been ruined by socialism's failures. Liberals are so blind that they are major proponents of plans such as the Green New Deal. No concept of economics as their first failure. The Green New Deal is mentally devoid.