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Happiness and Economic Growth: Lessons from Developing Countries

Edited by Andrew Clark and Claudia Senik ()

in OUP Catalogue from Oxford University Press

Abstract: This volume, arising from a PSE-CEPREMAP-DIMeco conference, includes contributions by the some of the best-known researchers in happiness economics and development economics, including Richard Easterlin, who gave his name to the 'Easterlin paradox' that GDP growth does not improve happiness over the long run. Many chapters underline the difficulty of increasing well-being in developing countries, including China, even in the presence of sustained income growth. This is notably due to the importance of income comparisons to others, adaptation (so that we get used to higher income), and the growing inequality of income. In particular, rank in the local income distribution is shown to be important, creating a beggar-thy-neighbour effect in happiness. Wealth comparisons in China are exacerbated by the gender imbalance, as the competition for brides creates a striking phenomenon of conspicuous consumption on the housing market. Policy has to be aware of these effects. This applies in particular to those who try to use self-reported subjective well-being in order to generate a 'social subjective poverty line', which is a key issue in developing countries. However, the news is not only bad from the point of view of developing countries. One piece of good news is that GDP growth often seems to go hand-in-hand with lower happiness inequality, and thereby reduces the risk of extreme unhappiness. Contributors to this volume - Yann Algan, Sciences Po Andrew Clark, Paris School of Economics Richard Easterlin, University of Southern California Ada Ferrer-i-Carbonell, CSIC, Barcelona Graduate School of Economics Sarah Fleche, Paris School of Economics Carol Graham, The Brookings Institution Ramani Gunatilaka, Monash University John Knight, University of Oxford Stefan Lollivier, INSEE Martin Ravallion, World Bank Paul Seabright, Toulouse School of Economics Claudia Senik, University Paris-Sorbonne and at the Paris School of Economics Conal Smith, OECD Xiaobo Zhang, IFPRI Katia Zhuravskaya, Paris School of Economics

Date: 2014
ISBN: 9780198723653
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