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  • Not by bread alone

    The Economic Times
    July 31, 2004

    NOT BY BREAD ALONE

    Adam Smith may not have got it exactly right when he observed in The
    Wealth of Nations that "No society surely can be flourishing and
    happy, of which the far greater part of the members are poor and
    miserable."

    Flying against the face of that argument is the conclusion of a World
    Values Survey conducted in 65 nations from 1999-01 by social
    scientists and first reported by the British magazine New Scientist.

    The survey indicated that poverty-stricken Nigeria had the world's
    highest percentage of happy people. When Cervantes stated in the 16th
    century that "There are but two families in the world, the haves and
    the have-nots", he may never have anticipated that the 21st century
    have-nots would have it in terms of happiness! Nigeria was followed
    by Mexico, Venezuela, El Salvador and Puerto Rico, in that order.

    At the bottom was Romania, just below Armenia and Russia. India was
    ranked 21, not too bad for a nation which used to believe that
    everything was maya!

    The country whose Declaration of Independence describes as sacrosanct
    "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" did not figure in the
    top ten, despite being the unrivalled economic and military
    superpower.

    The US was ranked 16th. The 19th century American writer Nathaniel
    Hawthorne had enough wisdom to observe that "Happiness in this world,
    when it comes, comes incidentally. Make it the object of pursuit and
    it leads us to a wild goose chase."

    Richard Layard of the Centre for Economic Performance of the London
    School of Economics may have put his finger on it when he was
    recently quoted in Newsweek as stating that satisfying relationships
    had a greater bearing on happiness than income.

    What better way of forging such relationships than in nations like
    Nigeria where community trust has helped people survive hard times?
    Conversely, a single-minded pursuit of individual happiness could end
    up in what the American writer Norman Mailer once called "an
    air-conditioned nightmare."
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