I meant my response to Alain Alcouffe yesterday to go to the list.
Somehow, it went private. Given the general interest I think the
possible ensuing discussion may take, I'm posting here my response.
> Dear Alain,
>
> It is clear to me that the criticism you quote must have come from the
> Benthamite community -- followers of Jeremy Bentham's Utilitarianism,
> among whom were some early socialists. I'm however puzzled by your
> willingness to accept as valid (correct) the transference of "national
> prosperity" to being "national happiness." In the _Webster's
> Dictionary_, "prosperity" is defined as "the condition of being
> successful or thriving; esp: economic well-being" (1980, p. 918).
> Thus, "national wealth" must mean the same thing as "national
> prosperity." As for those utilitarians or socialists harping upon
> income inequality and denying the equivalence of the terms, because
> lower income people harbor some unhappiness at the site of the
> affluence of the higher income people, they just have to remember
> another of Smith's important observations about human nature: "The
> affluence of the rich excites the indignation of the poor, who are
> often both driven by want, and prompted by envy, to invade his
> property. ... He is at all times surrounded by unknown enemies, whom,
> though he never provoked, he can never appease, and from whose
> injustice he can be protected only by the powerful arm of the civil
> magistrate continually held up to chastise it. The acquisition of
> valuable and extensive property, therefore, necessarily requires the
> establishment of civil government" (_WN_, 2: 232).
>
> Happiness is a state of mine. To equate that with material wealth is
> to make a grave mistake. Any wonder that in those countries where
> their governments strive so hard forcibly to eliminate income
> inequality, more people find themselves unhappy (longing to escape)
> than in those where economic liberty and income inequality exit?
> Think about Maoist China and life after Deng Xiaping's economic policy
> changes, former East versus West Germany, Cuba versus Jamaica, North
> versus South Korea, Venezuela before and after the socialist
> transformation, beginning with Hugo Chavez and now Nicholas Maduro,
> etc. Attempting to maximize Gross National Happiness, other than
> through civil and economic liberties, is an illusion. Historians of
> economic thought can help dissuade governments from that enterprise.
>
> James Ahiakpor
Alain Alcouffe wrote:
>
> Dear all
>
> The enigmatic last sentence of Adam Smith's obituary published by the
> Times (Saturday, 24 July 1790) stressed a distinction between
> "national wealth" on the one hand and "national prosperity" on the
> other hand which can be compared with the contemporary contrast
> between the GDP and the Gross National Happiness.
>
> "he [A. Smith] deserves the chief praise, or the chief blame, of
> propagating a system which tends to confound National Wealth with
> national Prosperity. "
>
> I tried to trace the history of this distinction and found an
> anonymous article in the Tate's magazine about 'The law of
> primogeniture', in the Tait's Edinburgh Magazine edited by William
> Tait, Christian Isobel Johnstone (December 1846, pp. 797-801 (I have
> taken it from a google book easy to download). It includes some
> developments about national prosperity versus national happiness.
>
>> * It is a great and vulgar error to confound national prosperity
>> and national happiness. The distribution rather than the amount
>> of wealth among a people, contributes principally to general
>> happiness. There can be no doubt that our country has added to
>> its riches during the present century; but it is very clear that
>> the well-being of the bulk of the community has not increased in
>> a corresponding ratio. Between capital and labour there is a
>> great gulf fixed, and while the one ascends in the social scale,
>> the course of the other is one continued descent. To obtain the
>> greatest happiness for the greatest number ought to be the object
>> of political economy: but while the interests of the many are
>> thus sacrificed to the few, we can hardly expect that the
>> arrangements of society and the distribution of property should
>> be in unison with the spirit of the age, and the march of intellect.
>>
> No name of author is given and I wonder if anybody has an idea about
> this author. I just cannot find who was this opponent to the law of
> primogeniture and proponent of the "national happiness" through equality.
>
> Thanks for any hint or simply guess
>
> Best
>
> AA
>
--
James C.W. Ahiakpor, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus
Department of Economics
California State University, East Bay
Hayward, CA 94542
510-885-3137
510-885-7175 (Fax; Not Private)
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