The Origins of Happiness

(Elliott) #1
Chapter 8

Trust


For a society to be happy most of its citizens must behave in


a trustworthy fashion. It is impossible to measure whether


they do so directly. But, indirectly, we can ask the popula-


tion if they think that other citizens can be trusted. The


standard question that has been asked in many surveys over


many years in many countries is “In general, do you think


that most people can be trusted, or, alternatively that you


can’t be too careful in dealing with people?”


The proportion of people saying Yes to this question var-


ies astonishingly across countries— from 64% in Norway to


5% in Brazil.^6 One might ask, Do answers to these questions


correspond to real differences between countries? Their


validity is confirmed by the “lost wallet” experiment, first


conducted by the Reader’s Digest Europe in 1996. This exper-


iment involved dropping 10 cash- bearing wallets (including


name and address) in each of 20 cities in 14 western Euro-


pean countries, and in each of a dozen US cities. Research-


ers later used these data to validate the question on trust.^7


It turned out that, indeed, the actual frequency of return of


wallets was highly correlated with national average social


trust, as measured in international surveys. In fact in Oslo


all 10 wallets were returned, as they were in Copenhagen.


But, encouragingly, in the whole experiment two thirds of


all the wallets were returned.


The effect of trust revealed in Table 8.1 is truly striking.


A move from zero trust to universal trust raises citizen’s


life- satisfaction by over 1 point (out of 11)— greater than


the effect of finding a job.^8 Trust is important for economic


growth— as countless studies have shown.^9 But here we are


concerned with its direct impact on life- satisfaction, through

Free download pdf