Robert H. Frank
How not to buy happiness
An enduring paradox in the literature
on human happiness is that although
the rich are signi½cantly happier than
the poor within any country at any mo-
ment, average happiness levels change
very little as people’s incomes rise in
tandem over time.1 Richard Easterlin
and others have interpreted these ob-
servations to mean that happiness de-
pends on relative rather than absolute
income.2
In this essay I offer a slightly different
interpretation of the evidence–namely,
that gains in happiness that might have
been expected to result from growth in
absolute income have not materialized
because of the ways in which people in
affluent societies have generally spent
their incomes.
Tatsächlich, I wish to propose two differ-
ent answers to the question “Does mon-
ey buy happiness?” Considerable evi-
dence suggests that if we use an increase
in our incomes, as many of us do, simply
Robert H. Frank is H. J. Louis Professor of Eco-
nomics at the Johnson Graduate School of Man-
agement, Cornell University. His books include
“Choosing the Right Pond” (1985), “Passions
Within Reason,” (1988), and “Luxury Fever”
(1999).
© 2004 von der American Academy of Arts
& Wissenschaften
to buy bigger houses and more expen-
sive cars, then we do not end up any
happier than before. But if we use an
increase in our incomes to buy more of
certain inconspicuous goods–such as free-
dom from a long commute or a stressful
job–then the evidence paints a very dif-
ferent picture. The less we spend on con-
spicuous consumption goods, the better
we can afford to alleviate congestion;
and the more time we can devote to fam-
ily and friends, to exercise, schlafen, travel,
and other restorative activities. Auf der
best available evidence, reallocating our
time and money in these and similar
ways would result in healthier, longer–
and happier–lives.
The main method that psychologists
have used to measure human well-being
has been to conduct surveys in which
they ask people whether they are: A) sehr
1 This paper draws heavily on chapters 5 Und 6
of my book Luxury Fever (New York: The Free
Drücken Sie, 1999).
2 Richard Easterlin, “Does Economic Growth
Improve the Human Lot?” in Nations and
Households in Economic Growth: Essays in Honor
of Moses Abramovitz, Hrsg. Paul David and Melvin
Reder (New York: Academic Press, 1974), Und
Richard Easterlin, “Will Raising the Incomes of
All Increase the Happiness of All?” Journal of
Economic Behavior and Organization 27 (1995):
35–47.
Dædalus Spring 2004
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Robert H.
Frank
An
happiness
happy; B) fairly happy; or c) not happy.3
Most respondents are willing to answer
the question, and not all of them re-
spond “very happy,” even in the United
Zustände, where one might think it advan-
tageous to portray oneself as being very
happy. Many people describe themselves
as fairly happy, and others confess to
being not happy. A given person’s re-
sponse tends to be consistent from one
survey to the next.
Happiness surveys and a variety of
other measures employed by psycholo-
gists are strongly correlated with observ-
able behaviors that we associate with
well-being.4 If you’re happy, for exam-
Bitte, you’re more likely to initiate social
contact with friends. You’re more likely
to respond positively when others ask
you for help. You’re less likely to suffer
from psychosomatic illnesses–digestive
disorders, other stress disorders, Kopf-
aches, vascular stress. You’re less likely
to be absent from work or to get in-
volved in disputes at work. And you’re
less likely to attempt suicide–the ulti-
mate behavioral measure of unhappi-
ness. In sum, it appears that human hap-
piness is a real phenomenon that we can
measure.5
How does happiness vary with in-
kommen? As noted earlier, studies show
3 See Easterlin, “Does Economic Growth Im-
prove the Human Lot?”
4 For surveys of this evidence, see chapter 2 von
Robert H. Frank, Choosing the Right Pond (Neu
York: Oxford University Press, 1985) and An-
drew Clark and Andrew Oswald, “Satisfaction
and Comparison Income,” Journal of Public Eco-
nomics 61 (1996): 359–381.
5 Ed Diener and Richard E. Lucas, “Personality
and Subjective Well-Being,” in Understanding
Well-Being: Scienti½c Perspectives on Enjoyment and
Suffering, Hrsg. Daniel Kahneman, Ed Diener, Und
Norbert Schwartz (New York: The Russell Sage
Foundation, 1998).
that when incomes rise for everybody,
well-being doesn’t change much. Con-
sider the example of Japan, which was a
very poor country in 1960. Between then
and the late 1980s, its per capita income
rose almost four-fold, placing it among
the highest in the industrialized world.
Yet the average happiness level reported
by the Japanese was no higher in 1987
als in 1960.6 They had many more
washing machines, cars, cameras, Und
other things than they used to, but they
did not register signi½cant gains on the
happiness scale.
The same pattern consistently shows
up in other countries as well, and that’s
a puzzle for economists. If getting more
income doesn’t make people happier,
why do they go to such lengths to get
more income? Warum, Zum Beispiel, do to-
bacco company ceos endure the public
humiliation of testifying before Con-
gress that there’s no evidence that smok-
ing causes serious illnesses?
It turns out that if we measure the in-
come-happiness relationship in another
Weg, we get just what the economists
suspected all along. When we plot aver-
age happiness versus average income for
clusters of people in a given country at a
given time, we see that rich people are in
fact much happier than poor people. In
one study based on U.S. Daten, for exam-
Bitte, people in the top decile of the in-
come distribution averaged more than
½ve points higher on a ten-point happi-
ness scale than people in the bottom
decile.7
The evidence thus suggests that if in-
come affects happiness, it is relative, nicht
6 Ruut Veenhoven, Happiness in Nations (Rot-
terdam: Erasmus University, 1993).
7 Ed Diener, Ed Sandvik, Larry Seidlitz, Und
Marissa Diener, “The Relationship Between In-
come and Subjective Well-Being: Relative or
Absolute?” Social Indicators Research 28 (1993):
195–223.
70
Dædalus Spring 2004
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How not
to buy
happiness
absolute, income that matters. Some so-
cial scientists who have pondered the
signi½cance of these patterns have con-
cluded that, at least for people in the
world’s richest countries, no useful pur-
pose is served by further accumulations
of wealth.8
On its face, this should be a surprising
conclusion, since there are so many
seemingly useful things that having ad-
ditional wealth would enable us to do.
Would we really not be any happier if,
sagen, the environment were a little clean-
er, or if we could take a little more time
off, or even just eliminate a few of the
hassles of everyday life? In principle at
least, people in wealthier countries have
these additional options, and it should
surprise us that this seems to have no
measurable effect on their overall well-
Sein.
There is indeed independent evidence
that having more wealth would be a good
thing, provided it were spent in certain
ways. The key insight supported by this
evidence is that even though we appear
to adapt quickly to across-the-board in-
creases in our stocks of most material
goods, there are speci½c categories in
which our capacity to adapt is more lim-
ited. Additional spending in these cate-
gories appears to have the greatest ca-
pacity to produce signi½cant improve-
ments in well-being.
The human capacity to adapt to dra-
matic changes in life circumstances is
impressive. Asked to choose, most peo-
ple state con½dently that they would
rather be killed in an automobile acci-
dent than to survive as a quadriplegic.
And so we are not surprised to learn that
severely disabled people experience a
period of devastating depression and
disorientation in the wake of their acci-
dents. What we do not expect, Jedoch,
are the speed and extent to which many
of these victims accommodate to their
new circumstances. Within a year’s
Zeit, many quadriplegics report roughly
the same mix of moods and emotions as
able-bodied people do.9 There is also ev-
idence that the blind, the retarded, Und
the malformed are far better adapted to
the limitations imposed by their condi-
tions than most of us might imagine.10
We adapt swiftly not just to losses but
also to gains. Ads for the New York State
Lottery show participants fantasizing
about how their lives would change if
they won. (“I’d buy the company and
½re my boss.”) People who actually win
the lottery typically report the anticipat-
ed rush of euphoria in the weeks after
their good fortune. Follow-up studies
done after several years, Jedoch, indi-
cate that these people are often no hap-
pier–and indeed, are in some ways less
happy–than before.11
Zusamenfassend, our extraordinary powers of
adaptation appear to help explain why
absolute living standards simply may not
matter much once we escape the physi-
cal deprivations of abject poverty. Das
interpretation is consistent with the im-
pressions of people who have lived or
9 R. J. Bulman and C. B. Wortman, “Attributes
of Blame and ‘Coping’ in the ‘Real World’: Se-
vere Accident Victims React to Their Lot,” Jour-
nal of Personality and Social Psychology 35 (Mai
1977): 351–363.
10 P. Cameron, “Stereotypes About Genera-
tional Fun and Happiness vs. Self-Appraised
Fun and Happiness,” The Gerontologist 12 (Sum-
mer 1972): 120–123.
8 Sehen, Zum Beispiel, Peter Townsend, “The
Development of Research on Poverty,” in Social
Security Research: The De½nition and Measurement
of Poverty (London: hmso, 1979).
11 P. Brickman, D. Coates, and R. Janoff-Bul-
man, “Lottery Winners and Accident Victims:
Is Happiness Relative?” Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology 36 (August 1978): 917–927.
Dædalus Spring 2004
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Robert H.
Frank
An
happiness
traveled extensively abroad, who report
that the struggle to get ahead seems to
play out with much the same psychologi-
cal effects in rich societies as in those
with more modest levels of wealth.12
These observations provide grist for
the mills of social critics who are offend-
ed by the apparent wastefulness of the
recent luxury-consumption boom in the
Vereinigte Staaten. What many of these crit-
ics typically overlook, Jedoch, is that
the power to adapt is a two-edged sword.
It may indeed explain why having bigger
houses and faster cars doesn’t make us
any happier; but if we can also adapt ful-
ly to the seemingly unpleasant things we
often have to endure to get more money,
then what’s the problem? Perhaps social
critics are simply barking up the wrong
tree.
I believe, Jedoch, that to conclude
that absolute living standards do not
matter is a serious misreading of the
evidence. What the data seem to say is
that as national income grows, Menschen
do not spend their extra money in ways
that yield signi½cant and lasting in-
creases in measured satisfaction. But this
still leaves two possible ways that ab-
solute income might matter. One is that
people might have been able to spend
their money in other ways that would
have made them happier, yet for various
reasons they did not, or could not, do so.
I will describe presently some evidence
that strongly supports this possibility.
The second possibility is that although
measures of subjective well-being may
do a reasonably good job of tracking our
experiences as we are consciously aware
of them, that may not be all that matters
to us. Zum Beispiel, imagine two parallel
universes, one just like the one we live in
12 David G. Myers, The Pursuit of Happiness:
Who is Happy and Why? (New York: Avon,
1993).
now and another in which everyone’s in-
come is twice what it is now. Suppose
that in both cases you would be the
median earner, with an annual income
von $100,000 in one case and $200,000
in the other. Suppose further that you
would feel equally happy in the two uni-
verses–an assumption that is consistent
with the evidence discussed thus far.
And suppose, ½nally, that you know
that people in the richer universe would
spend more to protect the environment
from toxic waste, and that this would
result in healthier and longer, even if
not happier, lives for all. Can there be
any question that it would be better to
live in the richer universe?
My point is that although the emerg-
ing science of subjective well-being has
much to tell us about the factors that
contribute to human satisfaction, nicht
even its most ardent practitioners
would insist that it offers the ½nal word.
Whether growth in national income is,
or could be, a generally good thing is a
question that will have to be settled by
the evidence.
And there is in fact a rich body of evi-
dence that bears on this question. Eins
clear message of this evidence is that,
beyond some point, across-the-board
increases in spending on many types of
material goods do not produce any last-
ing increment in subjective well-being.
Sticking with the parallel-universes met-
aphor, let us imagine people from two
societies, identical in every respect save
eins: in society A everyone lives in a
house with 4,000 square feet of floor
Raum, whereas in society B each house
has only 3,000 square feet. If the two
societies were completely isolated from
one another, there is no evidence to sug-
gest that psychologists and neuroscien-
tists would be able to discern any signi½-
cant difference in their respective aver-
age levels of subjective well-being. Rath-
72
Dædalus Spring 2004
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er, we would expect each society to have
developed its own local norm for what
constitutes adequate housing, und das
people in each society would therefore
be equally satis½ed with their houses
and other aspects of their lives.
Darüber hinaus, we have no reason to sup-
pose that there would be other impor-
tant respects in which it might be prefer-
able to be a member of society A rather
than society B. Thus the larger houses in
society A would not contribute to longer
Leben, more freedom from illness, or in-
deed any other signi½cant advantage
over the members of society B. Once
house size achieves a given threshold,
the human capacity to adapt to further
across-the-board changes in house size
would appear to be virtually complete.
Natürlich, it takes real resources to
build larger houses. A society that built
4,000-square-foot houses for everyone
could have built 3,000-square-foot hous-
es instead, freeing up considerable re-
sources that could have been used to
produce something else. Hence this cen-
tral question: Are there alternative ways
of spending these resources that could
have produced lasting gains in human
welfare?
An af½rmative answer would be logi-
cally impossible if our capacity to adapt
to every other possible change were as
great as our capacity to adapt to larger
Häuser. As it turns out, Jedoch, unser
capacity to adapt varies considerably
across domains. There are some stimuli,
such as environmental noise, to which
we may adapt relatively quickly at a
conscious level, yet to which our bodies
continue to respond in measurable ways
even after many years of exposure. And
there are stimuli to which we never
adapt over time but rather become sensi-
tized; various biochemical allergens are
examples, but we also see instances on a
more macro scale. Daher, after several
How not
to buy
happiness
months’ exposure, the of½ce boor who
initially took two weeks to annoy you
can accomplish the same feat in only
seconds.
The observation that we adapt more
fully to some stimuli than to others
opens the possibility that moving re-
sources from one category to another
might yield lasting changes in well-
Sein. Considerable evidence bears on
this possibility.
A convenient way to examine this
evidence is to consider a sequence of
thought experiments in which you
must choose between two hypothetical
societies. The two societies have equal
wealth levels but different spending pat-
Seeschwalben. In each case, let us again suppose
that residents of society A live in 4,000-
square-foot houses while those of socie-
ty B live in 3,000-square-foot houses.
In each case, the residents of society B
use the resources saved by building
smaller houses to bring about some oth-
er speci½c change in their living condi-
tionen. In the ½rst thought experiment, ICH
will review in detail what the evidence
says about how that change would affect
the quality of their lives. In the succeed-
ing examples, I will simply state the rele-
vant conclusions and refer to supporting
evidence published elsewhere.
Which would you choose: society A,
whose residents have 4,000-square-foot
houses and a one-hour automobile com-
mute to work through heavy traf½c; oder
society B, whose residents have 3,000-
square-foot houses and a ½fteen-minute
commute by rapid transit?
Let us suppose that the cost savings
from building smaller houses are suf½-
cient to fund not only the construction
of high-speed public transit, but also to
make the added flexibility of the auto-
mobile available on an as-needed basis.
Daher, as a resident of society B, you need
Dædalus Spring 2004
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Robert H.
Frank
An
happiness
not give up your car. You can drive it to
work on those days when you need extra
flexibility, or you can come and go when
needed by taxi. The only thing you and
others must sacri½ce to achieve the
shorter daily commute of society B is
additional floor space in your houses.
A rational person faced with this
choice will want to consider the avail-
able evidence on the costs and bene½ts
of each alternative. As concerns the psy-
chological cost of living in smaller hous-
es, the evidence provides no reason to
believe that if you and all others live in
3,000-square-foot houses, your subjec-
tive well-being will be any lower than if
you and all others live in 4,000-square-
foot houses. Natürlich, if you moved
from society B to society A, you might
be pleased, even excited, at ½rst to expe-
rience the additional living space. Aber
we can predict that in time you would
adapt and simply consider the larger
house the norm.
Someone who moved from society B
to society A would also initially expe-
rience stress from the extended com-
mute through heavy traf½c. Over time,
his consciousness of this stress might
diminish. But there is an important dis-
tinction: unlike his essentially complete
adaptation to the larger house, his adap-
tation to his new commuting pattern
will be only partial. Available evidence
clearly shows that, even after long peri-
ods of adjustment, most people experi-
ence the task of navigating through
heavy commuter traf½c as stressful.13
In this respect, the effect of exposure
to heavy traf½c is similar to the effect of
exposure to noise and other irritants.
Daher, even though a large increase in
background noise at a constant, steady
level is experienced as less intrusive as
time passes, prolonged exposure none-
theless produces lasting elevations in
blood pressure.14 If the noise is not only
loud but intermittent, people remain
conscious of their heightened irritability
even after extended periods of adapta-
tion, and their symptoms of central ner-
vous system distress become more pro-
nounced.15 This pattern was seen, für
Beispiel, in a study of people living next
to a newly opened noisy highway. Four
months after the highway opened, 21
percent of residents interviewed said
they were not annoyed by the noise, Aber
that ½gure dropped to 16 percent when
the same residents were interviewed a
year later.16
Among the various types of noise
exposure, worst of all is exposure to
sounds that are not only loud and inter-
mittent, but also unpredictably so. Sub-
jects exposed to such noise in the labora-
tory experience not only physiological
symptoms of stress, but also behavioral
symptoms. They become less persistent
in their attempts to cope with frustrat-
ing tasks, and suffer measurable impair-
ments in performing tasks requiring care
and attention.17
Unpredictable noise may be particu-
larly stressful because it confronts the
subject with a loss of control. David
Glass and his collaborators con½rmed
this hypothesis in an ingenious experi-
14 David C. Glass, Jerome Singer, and James
Pennegaker, “Behavioral and Physiological Ef-
fects of Uncontrollable Environmental Events,”
in Perspectives on Environment and Behavior, Hrsg.
Daniel Stokols (New York: Plenum, 1977).
15 Ebenda.
16 N. D. Weinstein, “Community Noise Prob-
lems: Evidence Against Adaptation,” Journal of
Environmental Psychology 2 (1982): 82–97.
13 Meni Koslowsky, Avraham N. Kluger, Und
Mordechai Reich, Commuting Stress (New York:
Plenum, 1995).
17 Glass et al., “Behavioral and Physiological
Effects of Uncontrollable Environmental
Events.”
74
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How not
to buy
happiness
ment that exposed two groups of sub-
jects to a recording of loud unpredict-
able noises. Whereas subjects in one
group had no control over the recording,
subjects in the other group could stop
the tape at any time by flipping a switch.
These subjects were told, Jedoch, Das
the experimenters would prefer that
they not stop the tape, and most subjects
honored this preference. Following ex-
posure to the noise, subjects with access
to the control switch made almost 60
percent fewer errors than the other sub-
jects on a proofreading task and made
more than four times as many attempts
to solve a dif½cult puzzle.18
Commuting through heavy traf½c is in
many ways more like exposure to loud
unpredictable noise than to constant
background noise. Delays are dif½cult to
predict, much less control, and one nev-
er quite gets used to being cut off by
drivers who think their time is more
valuable than anyone else’s. A large sci-
enti½c literature documents a multitude
of stress symptoms that result from pro-
tracted driving through heavy traf½c.
One strand in this literature focuses
on the experience of urban bus drivers,
whose exposure to the stresses of heavy
traf½c is higher than that of most com-
muters, but who have also had greater
opportunity to adapt to those stresses.
A disproportionate share of the absen-
teeism of urban bus drivers stems from
stress-related illnesses such as gastroin-
testinal problems, headaches, and anxi-
ety.19 Many studies have found sharply
elevated rates of hypertension among
bus drivers relative to those of a variety
of control groups, including a control
18 Ebenda., ½gures 5 Und 6.
19 L. Long and J. Perry, “Economic and Occu-
pational Causes of Transit Operator Absentee-
ism: A Review of Research,” Transport Reviews
5 (1985): 247–267.
group of bus drivers pre-employment.20
Additional studies have found elevations
of stress hormones such as adrenaline,
noradrenaline, and cortisol in urban bus
drivers.21 And one study found eleva-
tions of adrenaline and noradrenaline to
be strongly positively correlated with
the density of the traf½c with which the
bus drivers had to contend.22 More than
half of all urban bus drivers retire pre-
maturely with some form of medical dis-
ability.23
A one-hour daily commute through
heavy traf½c is presumably less stressful
than operating a bus all day in an urban
Bereich. Yet this difference is one of degree
rather than of kind. Studies have shown
that the demands of commuting through
heavy traf½c often result in emotional
and behavioral de½cits upon arrival at
home or work.24 Compared to drivers
20 D. Ragland, M. Winkleby, J. Schwalbe, B.
Holman, L. Morse, L. Syme, and J. Fischer,
“Prevalence of Hypertension in Bus Drivers,”
International Journal of Epidemiology 16 (1987):
208–214; W. Pikus and W. Tarranikova, “The
Frequency of Hypertensive Diseases in Public
Transportation,” Terapevischeskii Archives 47
(1975): 135–137; and G. Evans, M. Palsane, Und
S. Carrere, “Type A Behavior and Occupational
Stress: A Cross-Cultural Study of Blue-Collar
Workers,” Journal of Personality and Social Psy-
chology 52 (1987): 1002–1007.
21 Ebenda.
22 G. Evans and S. Carrere, “Traf½c Conges-
tion, Perceived Control, and Psychophysiologi-
cal Stress Among Urban Bus Drivers,” Journal
of Applied Psychology 76 (1991): 658–663.
23 Gary W. Evans, “Working on the Hot Seat:
Urban Bus Drivers,” Accident Analysis and Pre-
vention 26 (1994): 181–193.
24 David C. Glass and Jerome Singer, Urban
Stressors: Experiments on Noise and Social Stres-
sors (New York: Academic Press, 1972); D. R.
Sherrod, “Crowding, Perceived Control, Und
Behavioral Aftereffects,” Journal of Applied Social
Psychologie 4 (1974): 171–186.
Dædalus Spring 2004
75
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Robert H.
Frank
An
happiness
who commute through low-density traf-
½c, those who commute through heavy
traf½c are more likely to report feelings
of annoyance.25 And higher levels of
commuting distance, Zeit, and speed
are signi½cantly positively correlated
with increased systolic and diastolic
blood pressure.26
The prolonged experience of commut-
ing stress is also known to suppress im-
mune function and shorten longevity.27
Even daily spells in traf½c as brief as ½f-
teen minutes have been linked to signif-
icant elevations of blood glucose and
cholesterol, and to declines in blood co-
agulation time–all factors that are posi-
tively associated with cardiovascular dis-
ease. Commuting by automobile is also
positively linked with the incidence of
various cancers, especially cancer of the
lung, possibly because of heavier expo-
sure to exhaust fumes.28 The incidence
of these and other illnesses rises with the
length of commute,29 and is signi½cant-
ly lower among those who commute by
bus or rail,30 and lower still among non-
25 Daniel Stokols, Raymond W. Novaco, Jean-
nette Stokols, and Joan Campbell, “Traf½c Con-
gestion, Type A Behavior, and Stress,” Journal of
Applied Psychology 63 (1978): 467– 480.
26 Ebenda., table 3.
27 Anita DeLongis, Susan Folkman, and Rich-
ard S. Lazarus, “The Impact of Daily Stress on
Health and Mood: Psychological and Social
Resources as Mediators,” Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology 54 (1988): 486–495.
28 Koslowsky et al., Commuting Stress, Kerl. 4.
29 Koslowsky et al., Commuting Stress.
30 P. Taylor and C. Pocock, “Commuter Travel
and Sickness: Absence of London Of½ce Work-
ers,” British Journal of Preventive and Social Medi-
cine 26 (1972): 165–172; Meni Koslowsky and
Moshe Krausz, “On the Relationship Between
Commuting, Stress Symptoms, and Attitudinal
commuters.31 Finally, the risk of death
and injury from accidents varies posi-
tively with the length of commute and
is higher for those who commute by car
than for those who commute by public
Transport.
In sum, there appear to be persistent
and signi½cant costs associated with a
long commute through heavy traf½c. Wir
can be con½dent that neurophysiologists
would ½nd higher levels of cortisol, nor-
epinephrine, adrenaline, noradrenaline,
and other stress hormones in the resi-
dents of society A. No one has done the
experiment to discover whether people
from society A would report lower levels
of life satisfaction than people from soci-
ety B, but since we know that drivers of-
ten report being consciously aware of
the frustration and stress they experi-
ence during commuting, it is a plausible
conjecture that subjective well-being, als
conventionally measured, would be low-
er in society A. Even if the negative ef-
fects of commuting stress never broke
through into conscious awareness, Wie-
immer, we would still have powerful rea-
sons for wishing to escape them.
On the strength of the available evi-
dence, Dann, it appears that a rational
person would have powerful reasons
to choose society B, and no reasons to
avoid it. Und doch, despite this evidence,
the United States is moving steadily in
the direction of society A. Even as our
houses continue to grow in size, the av-
erage length of our commute to work
Measures,” Journal of Applied Behavioral Sci-
zen (Dezember 1993): 485–492.
31 European Foundation for the Improvement
of Living and Working Conditions, “The Jour-
ney from Home to the Workplace: The Impact
on the Safety and Health of the Community/
Workers” (Dublin: European Foundation for
the Improvement of Living and Working Con-
ditions, 1984).
76
Dædalus Spring 2004
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Tisch 1
Four thought experiments: the conspicuous consumption of society A versus the inconspicuous
consumption of society B
How not
to buy
happiness
Society A
Society B
1
2
3
4
Everyone lives in 4,000-square-foot houses
and has no free time for exercise each
day.
Everyone lives in 4,000-square-foot houses
and has time to get together with friends
one evening each month.
Everyone lives in 4,000-square-foot houses
and has one week of vacation each year.
Everyone lives in 4,000-square-foot houses
and has a relatively low level of personal
autonomy in the workplace.
1
2
3
4
Everyone lives in 3,000-square-foot houses
und hat 45 minutes available for exercise
each day.
Everyone lives in 3,000-square-foot houses
and has time to get together with friends
four evenings each month.
Everyone lives in 3,000-square-foot houses
and has four weeks of vacation each year.
Everyone lives in 3,000-square-foot houses
and has a relatively high level of personal
autonomy in the workplace.
continues to grow longer. Between 1982
Und 2000, Zum Beispiel, the time penalty
for peak-period travelers increased from
16 Zu 62 hours per year; the daily window
of time during which travelers might
experience congestion increased from
4.5 Zu 7 hours; and the volume of road-
ways where travel is congested grew
aus 34 Zu 58 percent.32 The Federal
Highway Administration predicts that
the extra time spent driving because of
delays will rise from 2.7 billion vehicle
hours in 1985 Zu 11.9 billion in 2005.33
Tisch 1 lists four similar thought ex-
periments that ask you to choose be-
tween societies that offer different com-
binations of material goods and free
time to pursue other activities. Each case
assumes a speci½c use of the free time
and asks that you imagine it to be one
that appeals to you (if not, feel free to
substitute some other activity that
does).
32 David Schrank and Tim Lomax, Der 2002
Urban Mobility Report, Texas Transportation
Institut,
The choice in each of these thought
experiments is one between conspicu-
ous consumption (in the form of larger
Häuser) and what, for want of a better
Begriff, I shall call inconspicuous con-
sumption–freedom from traf½c conges-
tion, time with family and friends, vaca-
tion time, and a variety of favorable job
characteristics. In each case the evidence
suggests that subjective well-being will
be higher in the society with a greater
balance of inconspicuous consump-
tion.34 And yet in each case the actual
trend in U.S. consumption patterns has
been in the reverse direction.
The list of inconspicuous consump-
tion items could be extended consider-
ably. Thus we could ask whether living
in slightly smaller houses would be a
reasonable price to pay for higher air
Qualität, for more urban parkland, für
cleaner drinking water, for a reduction
in violent crime, or for medical research
that would reduce premature death. And
in each case the answer would be the
same as in the cases we have considered
thus far.
33 Charles S. Clark, “Traf½c Congestion,” The
CQ Researcher, 6 Mai 1994, 387–404.
34 For a detailed survey of the supporting stud-
ies, see Frank, Luxury Fever, Kerl. 6.
Dædalus Spring 2004
77
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Robert H.
Frank
An
happiness
My point in the thought experiments
is not that inconspicuous consumption
is always preferable to conspicuous con-
sumption. In der Tat, in each case we might
envision a minority of rational individu-
als who might choose society A over so-
ciety B. Some people may simply dislike
autonomy on the job, or dislike exercise,
or dislike spending time with family and
friends. But if we accept that there is lit-
tle sacri½ce in subjective well-being
when all have slightly smaller houses,
the real question is whether a rational
person could ½nd some more productive
use for the resources thus saved. Gegeben
the absolute sizes of the houses involved
in the thought experiments, the answer
to this question would seem to be yes.
It might seem natural to suppose that
when per capita income rises sharply, als
it has in most countries since at least the
end of World War II, most people would
spend more on both conspicuous and in-
conspicuous consumption. In many in-
stances, this is in fact what seems to have
passiert. Thus the cars we buy today
are not only faster and more luxuriously
equipped, but also safer and more reli-
able. If both forms of consumption have
been rising, Jedoch, and if inconspicu-
ous consumption boosts subjective well-
Sein, then why has subjective well-
being not increased during the last sev-
eral decades?
A plausible answer is that whereas
some forms of inconspicuous consump-
tion have been rising, others have been
declining, often sharply. There have
been increases in the annual number of
hours spent at work in the United States
during the last two decades; traf½c has
grown considerably more congested;
savings rates have fallen precipitously;
personal bankruptcy ½lings are at an all-
time high; and there is at least a wide-
spread perception that employment se-
curity and autonomy have fallen sharply.
Declines in these and other forms of in-
conspicuous consumption may well have
offset the effects of increases in others.
The more troubling question is why we
have not used our resources more wisely.
If we could all live healthier, longer, Und
more satisfying lives by simply changing
our spending patterns, why haven’t we
done that?
As even the most ardent free-market
economists have long recognized, Die
invisible hand cannot be expected to de-
liver the greatest good for all in cases in
which each individual’s well-being de-
pends on the actions taken by others
with whom he does not interact directly.
This quali½cation was once thought im-
portant in only a limited number of are-
nas–most importantly, activities that
generate environmental pollution. Wir
now recognize, Jedoch, that the inter-
dependencies among us are considerably
more pervasive. For present purposes,
chief among them are the ways in which
the spending decisions of some individ-
uals affect the frames of reference within
which others make important choices.
Many important rewards in life–ac-
cess to the best schools, to the most de-
sirable mates, and even, in times of fam-
ine, to the food needed for survival–
depend critically on how the choices we
make compare to the choices made by
Andere. In most cases, the person who
stays at the of½ce two hours longer each
day to be able to afford a house in a bet-
ter school district has no conscious in-
tention to make it more dif½cult for oth-
ers to achieve the same goal. Yet that is
an inescapable consequence of his ac-
tion. The best response available to oth-
ers may be to work longer hours as well,
thereby to preserve their current posi-
tionen. Yet the ineluctable mathematical
logic of musical chairs assures that only
10 percent of all children can occupy
78
Dædalus Spring 2004
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top-decile school seats, no matter how
many hours their parents work.
That many purchases become more
attractive to us when others make them
means that consumption spending has
much in common with a military arms
Wettrennen. A family can choose how much of
its own money to spend, but it cannot
choose how much others spend. Buying
a smaller-than-average vehicle means
greater risk of dying in an accident.
Spending less on an interview suit
means a greater risk of not landing the
best job. Yet when all spend more on
heavier cars and more ½nely tailored
suits, the results tend to be mutually off-
setting, just as when all nations spend
more on armaments. Spending less–
on bombs or on personal consumption–
frees up money for other pressing uses,
but only if everyone does it.
Was, exactly, is the incentive prob-
lem that leads nations to spend too
much on armaments? It is not suf½cient
merely that each nation’s payoff from
spending on arms depends on how its
spending compares with that of rival na-
tionen. Suppose, Zum Beispiel, that each
nation’s payoff from spending on non-
military goods also depended, to the
same extent as for military goods, on the
amounts spent on nonmilitary goods by
other nations. The tendency of military
spending to siphon off resources from
other spending categories would then be
offset by an equal tendency in the oppo-
site direction. Das ist, if each nation had
a ½xed amount of national income to al-
locate between military and nonmilitary
goods, and if the payoffs in each catego-
ry were equally context sensitive, Dann
we would expect no imbalance across
the categories.
For an imbalance to occur in favor of
armaments, the reward from armaments
spending must be more context sensi-
tive than the reward from nonmilitary
How not
to buy
happiness
spending. And since this is precisely the
Fall, the generally assumed imbalance
occurs. After all, to be second best in a
military arms race often means a loss
of political autonomy–clearly a much
higher cost than the discomfort of hav-
ing toasters with fewer slots.
In brief, we expect an imbalance in the
choice between two activities if the indi-
vidual rewards from one are more con-
text sensitive than the individual re-
wards from the other. The evidence de-
scribed earlier suggests that the satisfac-
tion provided by many conspicuous
forms of consumption is more context
sensitive than the satisfaction provided
by many less conspicuous forms of con-
sumption. Wenn ja, this would help explain
why the absolute income and consump-
tion increases of recent decades have
failed to translate into corresponding
increases in measured well-being.
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