Religion
promises you heaven but gives you hell. – Anon.
One could be forgiven for thinking that
something as subjective and nebulous as happiness (thesaurus entries range from
‘content’ to ‘exultant’) is pretty near impossible to objectively measure. One
could also be forgiven for questioning the credibility of averaged-out
happiness measures for entire national populations. But that’s what some
statisticians do to earn their pay, and expressions such as “national happiness
capital” and the like are now being used in serious academic discourse, and
happiness ratings are compiled for numerous countries.
Last Friday was the International Day of
Happiness and we were all reminded of the happiest places in the world
according to the World Happiness Report of 2013. Let’s assume that the figures do actually
convey something meaningful (well, everybody else seems to do so). I’ll just
remind you of the top 10 (of the list of 85), in descending order: Denmark, Norway,
Switzerland, The Netherlands, Sweden, Canada, Finland, Austria, Iceland,
Australia. At the other end of the list as the least happy 10 places are, again
in descending order: Indonesia, Turkey, Libya, Bahrain, Montenegro, Pakistan, Nigeria,
Kosovo, Honduras, Portugal.
Analysis of the happiness data vis-à-vis other indicators revealed that
there was a good correlation with national wealth as measured by per capita GDP. Other indicators that
helped explain the observed variation in happiness were average life
expectancy, people reporting that there was someone in their life they could
count on, people feeling that they were able to make important life choices for
themselves, low levels of corruption, and generosity. These six factors explained
three-quarters of the overall variation.
Looking at the top 10 and the bottom 10 above,
much of this does appear to make some sense. The top 10 are affluent liberal
democracies where people live long, are largely free to make their own choices,
and with clean and effective public sectors. It’s not quite as clear-cut for
the bottom 10, though. Most have pcGDPs in the lower-middle range; none of them
are dirt poor, and Bahrain and Portugal stand out as being well above lower-middle.
Most of these countries are ‘democracies’, although the adjective ‘liberal’
would be somewhat debatable for at least a few of them.
One factor nobody has looked at to the best of
my knowledge in relation to national happiness ratings is religiosity. It seems
a perfectly valid factor to investigate in relation to how happy people are,
and there is plenty of good information around about the status of religion in
the countries of the world, among them the Global
Index of Religiosity and Atheism compiled by WIN-Gallup International. One
of the things their analysis of 2012 data revealed was an inverse correlation
(more of one measured variable, less of the other) between religiosity and
pcGDP. While the plots did not form a nice neat straight line (as you wouldn’t
expect such crude averaged-out measures to do anyway), the scattergram clearly
points to a line of best fit running downwards from the upper left quadrant
(low pcGDP, high religiosity) to the lower right quadrant (high pcGDP, low
religiosity).
Looking at our top 10 countries, we see a
cluster of what may be called ‘post-Christian’ societies. This does not mean
that there are no believers left in those countries, but rather that religion
no longer plays a discernible role in governance and an at best residual role in
public life. Polls (including Eurobarometer Polls for European countries –
useful as they are directly comparable) tend to show that the number of people
professing belief in the conventional Christian God in these countries is less
than half (in Sweden it’s down to 18%), although significant numbers may
profess a belief in some sort of supernatural power. Levels of professed
atheism and agnosticism are also high in these societies, outnumbering traditional
believers in the Netherlands and Sweden. It is also noteworthy that these
countries have a Protestant heritage (although Catholics outnumber Protestants
in Switzerland). What religion there is left is markedly ‘liberal’ – for
example, it has come to accept scientific accounts of origins, and exhibits ‘progressive’
attitudes towards gender roles and homosexuality. Looking at our bottom 10
countries, we see societies the official figures for which claim them to be
overwhelmingly Muslim in six instances and overwhelmingly Christian
(non-Protestant) in three, the remaining one being Nigeria with a near 50:50
Christian/Muslim split. Some of these countries’ government authorities do not
recognise atheism and agnosticism as valid religious categories and do not
report them as such. While most of these 10 countries have nominally secular
governments, religion continues to play a highly visible role in governance and
public life – and there is nothing remotely ‘liberal’ about much of it.
Of our top 10, eight countries also appear in
the WIN-Gallup religiosity and atheism ratings. For religiosity, they rank from
37th (of 57) to 53rd, while for atheism they rank from 7th
(of the same 57) to 21st. Four of them are on the list of the 10
countries that showed the biggest declines in religiosity between 2005 and
2012. Of our bottom 10, only three countries appear on the religiosity list and
they are very spread out – 2nd for Nigeria, 12th for
Pakistan and 54th for Turkey. They are a lot closer together on the
atheism list at between 38th and 49th place.
Although a simple thesis along the lines of
“more religion, less happiness” doesn’t quite
hold, there would appear to be a relationship between the two that is at least
as good as some indicators that have been tested against the happiness index
ratings. In liberal democracies where people are largely in control of their
own lives and are free to think about and discuss matters such as politics and
religion, people are happier than are their counterparts in more prescriptive
and oppressive societies. The source of oppression may be the State but it may
also be the religious establishment. The ubiquitous, overbearing presence of a
stultifying religious order that aims to control people’s minds and lives is
not conducive to happiness.
I think that it all boils down to how confident
people feel about being in charge of their own lives. A free and open society
where people make their own choices and where their voices are heard simply has
to produce happier populaces than a restrictive and closed society where people
are dictated to by secular and/or religious authorities who brook no argument.
The good old Protestant individualistic ethos paved the way for the modern
Western liberal democracy. It also paved the way for the affluent capitalist
society and – ironically – for the demise of religion as a guiding force in
public and private life.
Barend Vlaardingerbroek BSc (Auckland), BA, BEdSt (Queensland), DipCommonLaw,
PGDipLaws (London), MAppSc (Curtin), PhD (Otago), is associate professor of
education at the American University of Beirut and a regular contributor to
Breaking Views on geopolitical and social issues. Feedback welcome at bv00@aub.edu.lb.
2 comments:
Thank you for enunciating something which I have long had at the back of my mind. I think it is very true.
In the states of the USA, there is a strong negative relationship between median household income and religiosity. This might be expected.... Proverbs 30:9 (or near to that) is a prayer in which the author, pretty much an unknown, asks God that he neither be poor nor rich as the poor tend to steal to survive and the rich tend to forget god's law. If you consider societies in which the middle class is predominant over the lower class, then you'd expect a mostly negative relationship between SES and religiosity, even on the basis of a verse at least 2500 years old.
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