Positive relationships with family, friends, colleagues,
acquaintances and trading partners was identified in a recent article on this
blog as one of the five basic goods that a flourishing human would be expected
to have. Positive relationships make contributions to individual flourishing
that are universal, indispensable, not entirely incorporated in other basic
goods such as physical and mental health, and they do not serve just as a means to a
more basic good.
The meaning of positive in this context refers to motivations.
Positive relationships are motivated by love, compassion, mutual benefit, or
benign personal benefit, rather than by malice, or seeking personal gain at the
expense of others. The dividing line between positive and negative motivations occurs
at the point where there is an intention to infringe natural rights (as
discussed here).
Opportunities for individuals to have positive relationships
are more constrained in some countries than in others. That occurs to some
degree because of constraints on liberty. Positive personal and business
relationships of some kinds are not permitted in some parts of the world. Such
constraints impinge on the capacity of individuals for self-direction, the
basic good discussed in the preceding post.
Perceptions of the extent to which others can be trusted
have a major differential impact on opportunities for positive human
relationships in different countries. The following discussion makes use of the
concept of generalized trust, as defined by Christian Welzel in Freedom Rising
(2013). As Welzel explains, generalized trust “derives from trust in close
others and then extends to unspecified others to eventually include even remote
others”. In order to capture that idea, he combines variables from the World
Values Survey representing close trust (trust of family, neighbours and people
you know personally), unspecified trust (whether most people can be trusted,
and whether most people try to be fair) and remote trust (trust of people you
meet for the first time, people of another religion and people of another
nationality). In the index construction, all variables are converted to a 0 to
1 scale, close trust is given a weight of 1, unspecified trust and weight of 2
and remote trust a weight of 3.
The vertical axis of the accompany chart shows values of
generalized trust for 58 jurisdictions included in the 2010-14 wave of the
World Values Survey. Of those, the 5 jurisdictions with highest generalized
trust were Sweden, Australia, Netherlands, Hong Kong and United States.
If you want to explain why trust levels vary between
countries, it makes sense to look for reasons why people in some countries
might consider their compatriots to be untrustworthy, such as the incidence of
crime. The accompany chart shows the jurisdictions with highest levels of generalized
trust also score highly on the World Bank’s rule of law index. That index
incorporates data relating to the likelihood of crime and violence as well as
information on the quality of contract enforcement, property rights, the police
and the courts. In a recent article on this blog, I suggested that by
penalising plunder rule of law encourages trust and improves incentives for
mutually beneficial trade, as well as enabling societies to avoid the violence
associated with do-it-yourself (DIY) justice.
The association between trust and rule of law might also
reflect causation running from trust to incidence of crime. Societies with
high levels of generalized trust could be expected to have stronger incentives
for mutually beneficial, rather than predatory activity, a lower incidence of
crime and hence, higher rule of law index scores.
The chart also suggests that higher levels of generalized trust
tends to be associated with greater endorsement of emancipative values, as indicated
by the size of the bubbles. Christian Welzel’s index of emancipative values incorporates
twelve items from the World Values Survey covering values relating to autonomy,
choice, equality and voice (e.g. protecting freedom of speech and giving people
more say in government and workplace decisions). Emancipative values remain relatively dormant when people are poor, illiterate and isolated in local
groups, but emerge strongly as people acquire more action resources (wealth,
intellectual skills and opportunities to connect with others).
Since emancipative values involve greater tolerance of diversity
it is not surprising that people holding such values would be more likely to
trust people of different religions and nationalities. Welzel’s analysis in Freedom
Rising shows that at an individual level people who endorse emancipative
values tend to have higher levels of generalized trust, and that this impact is
amplified in societies where those values are more prevalent.
In addition to trust, positive relationships are reflected
in networks of individuals who can rely on each other for social support when
they need it. Responses to a Gallup World Poll question which asks people
whether they have relatives or friends to count on for help when they are in
trouble, suggests that support networks tend to be stronger in relatively high-income
countries. Of 136 countries in the data set used, 8 of the 10 with strongest
support networks are relatively high-income countries: Norway, Finland, Denmark,
New Zealand, Slovenia, Australia, Netherlands and Ireland. (The other 2 countries
in the top 10 are Turkmenistan and Mongolia.) Some relatively high-income
countries also appear well down the rankings, e.g. U.S.A. in 37th
place, Japan, 48th place and Greece in 89th place.
Conclusions
Positive human relationships can be motivated by love, compassion,
mutual benefit, or benign personal benefit. The extent to which others can be
trusted has an important impact on the opportunities for positive human
relationships. Trust levels tend to be higher in countries with relatively low
crime rates. Trust improves incentives for trade and other mutually beneficial
activities.
Generalized trust, which gives greatest weight to trust of
people who have just met and people from different religions and nationalities,
tends to be greatest where people hold emancipative values, involving greater
tolerance of diversity.
Networks of individuals who can rely on each other for
social support tend to be strongest in high-income countries.