Some friends who have visited my blog have told me that they
have had some difficulty in understanding the purpose of my recent series of posts
related to emancipative values. This post is dedicated to those people.
Recent posts on my blog have been concerned with the future of human flourishing in wealthy countries. Is the future likely to bring greater and more widespread opportunities for people to live happy
lives in wealthy countries?
Before attempting to summarise my answer that question I need to show how economic development produced better opportunities.
Before attempting to summarise my answer that question I need to show how economic development produced better opportunities.
My story begins a few centuries ago when it was normal for the
vast majority of people in all parts of the world to be preoccupied with obtaining
adequate food and shelter. The threat of famine was never far away, even though
there were seasons when food was bountiful and some centuries when the pressure
of population on food supplies was reduced in the aftermath of plagues. For the most part, people lived in small
communities isolated from the outside world. They often lived under the threat
of being robbed by their own rulers as well as by people in neighbouring
communities. It was common for people who did not share the religious beliefs
of their rulers to be persecuted and to be deprived of property and even their
lives. Violence was rife despite widespread religious observance.
Everyone should be aware that the process of economic
development began in earnest a couple of centuries ago with the industrial
revolution in north-eastern Europe. Important technological innovations had
previously occurred in various parts of the world, but this was the first time
that technological advances led eventually to a sustained improvement in
material living standards for large numbers of people.
A range of factors help to explain why the industrial
revolution occurred when and where it did, but values and beliefs that became
more approving of markets, experimentation, innovation and entrepreneurship
were of crucial importance. Market exchange promoted more trustworthy
behaviour, which reduced the cost of doing business and encouraged innovative investment
activities. The new values and beliefs favoured greater economic freedom,
including by removing regulatory barriers that had been protecting traditional
patterns of production from competition. Firms were free to use new technology
that enabled them to produce at lower cost and they were free to sell those
goods to consumers.
Over the following couple of centuries, economic development
provided greater economic opportunities to vast masses of people, first in
Europe and then in many other parts of the world. As people satisfied their basic
material needs to a greater extent they gave higher priority to such matters as
having freedom to choose what kind of work to do, where to live and who to live
with, having a say in community decisions and ensuring equal rights for women
and members of ethnic minorities. That is what we mean by the growth of
emancipative values.
So, will economic development continue to produce better
opportunities for people to live happier lives in wealthy countries? There are
several aspects to this question, but the one that concerns me most is that prevailing values in high income countries might take us further towards an ‘entitlement
culture’ that will threaten economic freedom and further economic development.
It is not hard to find evidence of the emergence of an
entitlement culture in wealthy countries. Interest groups that might have had
their origins in removal of discrimination or providing minimal opportunities
to needy groups now often make a lot of noise in seeking additional
entitlements for the people they represent. That tends to result in more
government regulation of business, higher government spending and higher taxes
i.e. a decline in economic freedom.
However, the results of my research provide some optimism
that the entitlement culture can be prevented from taking over and bringing economic
development to an end, along with the emancipation that has accompanied it.
While economic freedom has fallen in some wealthy countries (e.g. US and Japan)
it has risen in others (e.g. Sweden and Norway). There is evidence that the
priority that people give to economic growth has risen in some wealthy
countries in response to economic crises (e.g. Sweden) and that when this has
occurred, economic freedom has tended to rise.
Most importantly, it is a mistake to think that there is
some kind of battleground in society with people with high emancipative values on
one side pushing for an entitlement culture and materialistic people on the
other side pushing for higher economic growth. I could not find much evidence
of a tendency for people with high emancipative values to give lower priority to
economic growth – even after I went looking for it!
If
you want more information on the research that lies behind this post you will find relevant links in my last post.
No comments:
Post a Comment