Links to consider, 10/27
The Zvi on the Easterlin Paradox; Richard Hanania and Eric Kaufmann; Hanania on the New Right, two essays; Jonathan Rauch talks with Brian Chau;
Zvi Mowshowitz discusses the Easterlin Paradox, which claims that beyond a certain level, economic gains lead to very little improvement in measures of happiness. He lists some reasons to doubt the result.
I think that the entire project of “happiness research” is suspect. Imagine that you were asked to rate your happiness on a scale of 1 to 10. How would you answer the question? Based on your feelings at that instant? Trying to average over the past year? Over your life to date? Over your entire life, including the future? And what does the scale of 1 to 10 mean? Comparing your happiness to what, exactly?
When you conduct such a survey, you have no idea how anyone interpreted the question. And then you have no idea whether everybody has the same idea of what 7 out of 10 means. The whole field is just garbage.
And the goal ultimately is to give technocrats an excuse to say that markets fail and you need to give more power to technocrats. Suppose that Easterlin had found a result suggesting that markets make people really happy and therefore should be left alone. In that case, I suspect that his results would have languished in obscurity.
Richard Hanania has Eric Kaufmann on his podcast. Self-recommending. My favorite bits:
minute 21 likely that courts and bureaucracy will be increasingly polarized in the future because political orientations among young people are staying more fixed.
minute 48 -54 they argue about Haidt’s view that conservatives prefer order and progressives prefer novelty. Kaufmann argues in favor. Hanania says Trump is a disrupter. Kaufmann says yes, but his supporters see him disrupting a trend that was leading to disorder.
In the last 10 minutes or so they talk about viewpoint diversity and university choice. Kaufmann says that data shows that not having viewpoint diversity leads to self-censorship. Hanania says that he would rather go to school with high-SAT liberals than low-SAT viewpoint diversity.
Concerning the New Right, Richard Hanania writes,
It seems to me that there are two separate movements here that people are combining into one. You have some kind of GOP-Nationalist fusion, represented by the NatCon conference. This movement basically got most of what it wanted out of Trump’s time in office. Then you have Catholic traditionalists, who put more emphasis on abortion and want to shift the conservative movement far to the left on economics.
In a follow-up, Hanania writes,
If there’s one thing that distinguishes what Tyler calls “the New Right” from mainstream conservatism, it is a belief in the need to get serious about liberal domination of the most important institutions in the marketplace of ideas. Those associated with the movement therefore tend to prioritize issues like school curriculum and stopping social media censorship. The thinking seems to be that since liberals made everyone believe in LGBT and globalism by just seizing power and repeating the same messages over and over again, conservatives can either take control of institutions or build their own to brainwash people into accepting different views.
In other words, what they want is a milder version of the project undertaken by the Islamic Republic in 1979.
His point is that central government measures cannot overcome secularization and liberalism, at least in terms of winning hearts and minds. But he concludes with his colleague’s Religious Will Inherit the Earth argument. Hanania writes,
Today, social conservatives are in a hopeless battle against secularism and modernity. But in the long run, it will be secular elites who find it impossible to mold human nature to their preferred specifications.
I read Hanania as saying that culture will follow its own evolutionary path, beyond control by centralized power.
Jonathan Rauch talks with Brian Chau. Around minute 50, Rauch makes the case that the Republican Party is a threat to democracy, because Donald Trump has opened the door to declaring elections invalid. Chau tries to push back by saying that if the Republicans win the next one or two elections, then they are unlikely to resort to tactics to delegitimize them. About an hour in, Rauch insists that it is easier to win an election by throwing out false propaganda than winning legitimately. He says that this implies that the Republican Party is a major threat to democracy. To me, if propaganda works so well in electoral politics, the implication is that democracy is a threat to democracy. Which is sort of right. Rauch is implicitly giving credit to the Democratic Party as being sufficiently honest and decent that he does not worry about them.
Although I oppose populism, I am not nearly as ready as Rauch is to take the side of the elites. If you are more sympathetic to populists than I am, be prepared to find him even more infuriating than you find me.
RE: Easterlin
I was a grad student in economics when subjective happiness research was starting to become a thing. Easterlin gave a seminar on his paper at my university. I stood up during the Q/A and asked basically what you've said above: What exactly do you mean by "happiness" and how can you be sure that different people or different groups of people are interpreting it the same way?
He brushed me off fairly quickly without even attempting to address the question. I wish I could remember exactly what he said, but I very much got the impression that he was doing this and the profession was letting him get away with it, and he didn't see any point in hashing out this question with a skeptical 2nd year grad student. No one else asked any follow up.
I'll add here, that we took him to dinner and -- apart from brushing me off in the seminar -- he seemed to be a nice guy.
I've spent the subsequent 16 years wondering why I don't "get" happiness research and why everyone else seems to think it's a worthwhile thing.
> Rauch makes the case that the Republican Party is a threat to democracy, because Donald Trump has opened the door to declaring elections invalid.
The gumption that anyone might have to claim that Trump is in any way unique in this regard is galling. Trump's own legitimacy as president was under constant assault, and every effort was made to remove him from office by undemocratic means. Not to mention Bush v. Gore, Stacey Abrahms, etc (and, to be fair, questions about Obama's birth).
I say this not just for the sake of "whataboutism", but to make a point: simply telling people to stop questioning elections is not the solution. That is actually counterproductive, because it just creates more suspicion. We fix this by making it easier for people to trust elections. We need to invest in making elections more reliable, with things like voter ID, proper chain of custody for mail-ins, updated voter rolls, etc.