post-autistic economics review
Issue no. 26, 2 August 2004
article 6

 

 

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Gross National Happiness

 

Rajni Bakshi    (India)

© Copyright 2004 Rajni Bakshi



The tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan is an unlikely place for the birth of an international trend. Yet Bhutan is emerging as a global leader in the promotion of  'Gross National Happiness', a concept it first embraced three decades ago and which is now being fleshed out by a wide range of professionals and agencies across the world.


The term Gross National Happiness (GNH) was coined by Bhutan's King Jigme Singye Wangchuck when he ascended the throne in 1972.  It signaled his commitment to building an economy that would subserve Bhutan's unique culture permeated by Buddhist spiritual values.


Today, the concept of GNH resonates with a wide range of initiatives, across the world, to define prosperity in more holistic terms and to measure actual well-being rather than consumption. By contrast the conventional concept of Gross National Product (GNP) measures only the sum total of material production and exchange in any country.  Thus an international conference on Operationalizing GNH, hosted by the Bhutan Government in the capital city of Thimphu from February 18th to 22nd, 2003, attracted scholars and experts from 20 countries.


The evolving concept of GNH could prove a significant advancement in economic theory.  It endeavors to enhance the sophistication of human systems by emulating the infinitely greater sophistication of nature.  Just what would it mean for economic structures to emulate nature?  At present individual companies and entire countries are compelled to keep growing indefinitely. The only parallel for this in the natural world are cancer cells, which by growing exponentially destroy the host body and themselves. Today it is widely acknowledged that the human economy cannot keep growing at the cost of its habitat. Yet even after two decades of expanding environmental regulation we are still losing the race to save the planet. This is partly because production systems and consumption patterns are out of synch with the carrying capacity of the planet. The pressure for ever higher GNP is merely one manifestation of this.


The concept of GNH is seen as one of several ways in which these imbalances might  be rectified.  The international gathering at Thimphu reflected a consensus that Gross National 'Product'  would still need to be measured and given due importance but in ways that are actually conducive to GNH.  So far there has been a tendency to treat GNH as merely the well-intentioned slogan of a land-locked developing country ruled by an enlightened monarch. The obvious challenges of attempting to define or measure happiness have also helped to keep the concept of GNH on the outer fringes of serious discourse.


However,  as the conference in Thimphu showed, basic happiness can be measured since it pertains to quality of nutrition, housing, education, health care and community life. Thus, GNH may indeed be ready to come of age. The concept is essential for anyone working on development.  Three major factors seem to be responsible for the expanding credibility of GNH. One, there is wider awareness that GNP is a one-dimensional and thus misleading measure. Two, a wide range of indices have been devised which offer a more realistic assessment of even material prosperity. Three, there is growing pressure for an infusion of moral and cultural values into the core of economic policy.  GNP was never intended to be a measure of actual well-being. It is the artifact of a time when it was assumed that if there are more goods in circulation general welfare is ensured. As extensive documentation has shown, this is not always the case. Moreover, attention has also been drawn to dire side effects of the  GNP driven model of economic growth  in many societies, including the USA with its multiple social crises and rising sales of anti-depressants.  Such critiques are not new. Back in 1968 Robert Kennedy lamented that the GNP also grows because of the sales of rifles and knives and "...television programs which glorify violence in order to sell toys to our children. ...(it) does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play."

 

Since 1995 a San Francisco based think-tank called Redefining Progress has been annually assessing the American economy with an alternative yardstick called the Genuine Progress Indicators (GPI) which presents a relatively grim picture of American society compared to the GDP, as GNP is called in the USA.  The GPI  index gets closer to the reality of people's lives in the following ways. It includes the household and volunteer economy which is completely ignored by the GNP. It counts as a 'loss' all money spent on either preventing crime or repairing damage caused by it. Similarly all money spent on water filters, air-purification and other ways of coping with environmental degradation is counted as a 'loss'. Likewise money that goes into circulation because of car crashes and divorces is counted as a loss. The GPI also takes into account the extent to which the whole population shared in increasing material abundance.


The GPI is just one among several endeavors to evolve new indicators which measure actual conditions of human well being.  But although countries as diverse as Costa Rica, Canada, Iceland, Netherlands, Sri Lanka and Mongolia have established well-being indicators, the hegemony of the GNP measure remains in place.  This is why Bhutan's insistence on the primacy of GNH over GNP inspires people far beyond its borders. Their commitment to GNH has meant that moral and ethical values are placed at the core of their economic strategies for ensuring better food, housing and health for their population of just over 710,000 people. It has allowed them to both expand their network of roads and increase their forest cover. In most other developing countries the arrival of roads is inevitably followed by deforestation. This is not to suggest that all is well in the Kingdom of Bhutan or that they are able to fully live up to their GNH commitment. Yet their achievements are notable

 

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SUGGESTED CITATION:
Rajni Bakshi, “Gross National Happiness”, post-autistic economics review, issue no. 26, 2 August 2004, article 6, http://www.paecon.net/PAEReview/issue26/Bakshi26.htm