10.18.2007

Newsweek on Money & Happiness

According to standard economics, the most important commodity you can buy with additional wealth is choice. If you have $20 in your pocket, you can decide between steak and peanut butter for dinner, but if you have only $1 you'd better hope you already have a jar of jelly at home. Additional wealth also lets you satisfy additional needs and wants, and the more of those you satisfy the happier you are supposed to be.

The trouble is, choice is not all it's cracked up to be. Studies show that people like selecting from among maybe half a dozen kinds of pasta at the grocery store but find 27 choices overwhelming, leaving them chronically on edge that they could have chosen a better one than they did. And wants, which are nice to be able to afford, have a bad habit of becoming needs (iPod, anyone?), of which an advertising- and media-saturated culture create endless numbers. Satisfying needs brings less emotional well-being than satisfying wants.
...
If more money doesn't buy more happiness, then the behavior of most Americans looks downright insane, as we work harder and longer, decade after decade, to fatten our W-2s
Read the whole article

That's right, Americans crazy. We believe the "as seen on tv" claims, and will buy into whatever the marketing tells us- and it doesn't make us happy. I wonder if we'll ever learn?
"Americans who earn $50,000 per year are much happier than those who earn $10,000 per year," writes Gilbert, "but Americans who earn $5 million per year are not much happier than those who earn $100,000 per year." Another reason is that an expanding paycheck, especially in an expanding economy, produces expanding aspirations and a sense that there is always one more cool thing out there that you absolutely have to have. "Economic success falls short as a measure of well-being, in part because materialism can negatively influence well-being," Diener and Seligman conclude.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

I think I would change that to "Buying & Happiness" or the "materialism" your second quote mentions. I know some people who make a lot of money but they don't buy a lot of stuff (you couldn't tell they were as rich as they really were based on their possessions).

I think having money can give (or buy) you freedom to do what you want. But when you start using that money to buy more and more and more things, it's not going to make you happier.

Don't use money to attempt to buy your happiness, use money to buy the freedom to do the things that matter in life and will give you real satisfaction and happiness.

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