Newswise — If we can overcome the vagueness of well-being, making it into a more precise and measurable construct, we improve our chances of overturning dominant and potentially harmful economic metrics for progress, says Associate Professor Frank Martela from Aalto University in Finland. His new theory of well-being was released on 26 July in the prestigious Personality and Social Psychology Review.
‘Usually when you talk about happiness and well-being, you mean the same thing. But in a scientific context, they’re both quite vague,’ says Martela. Scientists operate with more precise constructs such as life satisfaction (this is the metric where Finland tops the world) and positive feelings.
‘The economy is ultimately just a tool for transitioning natural resources and human labor into well-being. To avoid the tail wagging the dog, the focus should be on well-being indicators rather than just economic ones,’ Martela says.
The global political fixation with GDP and economic growth not only confuses means with ends, he says, but it can also be dangerously counterproductive. Economic growth is increasingly recognized as an obstacle to humanity’s most pressing challenge: ensuring a habitable planet into the future.
Governments should make cuts in areas that offer the least well-being
To arrive at a better definition of well-being, we must start with understanding human nature and the basic needs that arise from it, Martela says. He identifies the human condition as one of ‘having, loving and doing’ in that we all have basic physical needs, social needs, and needs related to agency. The crucial question for our time is how to satisfy these needs for as many people as possible globally, while doing this in an ecologically sustainable way, where we do not transcend the planetary boundaries.
Sustainability is all too often presented as separate elements: ecological, economic and social sustainability. However, this is a mistake, says Martela, as the three components are clearly interdependent. While ecology sets the limits for all our actions, our economic and social systems have only instrumental value: They are ways of transforming environmental resources and human labour into well-being, which should be understood as the true target of governments.
‘If planetary limits are exceeded, current prosperity is produced in a way that threatens future generations. A sustainable economic system is one that enables future generations to prosper,’ says Martela. He acknowledges the importance of also following economic indicators. However, even in situations where governments need to make budget cuts, well-being indicators can help: With them one can identify the services producing most and least well-being for money, targeting the cuts at the latter. This enables governments to make cuts that harm people’s well-being the least.
‘Luckily there have been some positive developments in the last fifteen years and more governments are interested in how they should be measuring well-being, and how they can implement that in the policy context,’ says Martela. ‘If we standardise a more comprehensive measurement of well-being, we make it a more serious alternative for measuring progress.’
The article, published in Personality and Social Psychology Review, is based on the well-being theory of Erik Allardt, one of Finland's leading sociologists. Martela's model of “being as having, loving, and doing” combines Allardt's well-being theory with the latest psychological well-being research and self-determination theory.