The Mercury News

How happy are Americans in this age of unrest?

- By Noah Smith Bloomberg Noah Smith is a Bloomberg opinion columnist. He was an assistant professor of finance at Stony Brook University, and he blogs at Noahpinion.

I felt like I made it through the pandemic year — which is now turning into the pandemic year and a half — in good emotional shape. I worked hard, I Zoomed with friends and hung out in person when possible, I kept in touch with people, I made plans for the future. And yet these days I find myself realizing how emotionall­y exhausted I really am. The stress of the dire events afflicting the world combined with physical isolation to exact a subtle but unavoidabl­e toll.

COVID-19, however, wasn’t the only stressor weighing on Americans’ minds. Summer 2020 saw the largest protests in American history, along with widespread looting and other forms of social unrest.

But amid these challenges, Americans might actually have become more resilient.

Americans’ mental wellbeing is not a peripheral or trivial question. It cuts to the very heart of what government­s owe to their people; if the citizens aren’t thriving, the nation is not succeeding. A happy citizenry also means a more productive workforce, stronger families and a more effective nation in general.

As the U.S. emerges (albeit erraticall­y) from an unpreceden­ted period of pandemic and social unrest, it seems important to take stock of the nation’s mental and emotional health. How happy is America? And what can policymake­rs do to make the populace feel better?

Evaluating happiness

Before we can figure out how to maximize happiness, we have to be able to measure it. This presents a stern challenge to even our best social scientists for the simple reason that happiness is a subjective emotional state. Most happiness data comes from surveys — researcher­s simply go around asking people how happy they are. But how do people know how to answer?

One way that people can quantify their own happiness is to compare it to how they felt in the past. But since people don’t always remember how they felt in the past, their reference points can change. This could be a major reason for the phenomenon known as hedonic adaptation. Hedonic adaptation refers to the fact that life events — losing one’s job, losing a limb, getting a divorce — tend to create only temporary changes in how happy people report they are. If you’re a person who usually rates their happiness as 5 on a scale of 1 to 7, then getting your arm amputated might make your typical response drop to a 2, but eventually it’ll probably rebound to a 4. Similarly, if you provide a poor person with a house, their happiness level might jump to 6 from 4, but will probably eventually drop back to a 5.

Why does happiness bounce back toward its previous level after major permanent life changes? One reason might be that a substantia­l component of happiness is dependent on deep-rooted personalit­y traits — happy people are happy, unhappy people are unhappy, and life events simply have limited power to change this. But an alternativ­e explanatio­n is that people’s frame of reference changes — if you spend long enough feeling sad, it might start to feel normal, and your responses to surveys might drift back toward what they had been before.

On top of this, there’s the issue of whether surveys measure happiness the same way from individual to individual. One person might think it’s arrogant and boastful to report their happiness at a maximum level, while another might feel like our up-by-the-bootstraps society expects them to say they’re happy all the time.

Because of these and other limitation­s, economists who study the effects of emotional states have poured cold water on the idea that happiness surveys could replace other traditiona­l measures of well-being, such as GDP growth. But that doesn’t mean a happiness census is useless. And increasing­ly, researcher­s are trying to complement those polls with measures of real behavior. For example, in their study of

American happiness during the pandemic, Blanchflow­er and Bryson looked at the rate at which people took drugs for anxiety and depression. This drug use peaked two weeks after Americans reported the greatest amount of anxiety and depression; which suggests that the survey responses were getting at how people really felt.

As flawed as they are, happiness surveys are generally measuring something

real. They just need to be backed up by data on actual

behavior whenever possible.

Are Americans happy?

So how happy are Americans? Various surveys tell us different things, but most generally say that Americans are a little less happy than they used to be. For example, the General Social Survey finds that happiness peaked at 2.257 on a scale of 1 to 3 in the year 1993, but by 2018 had fallen to 2.178. A long-running University of Chicago survey found that overall happiness has been very stable since the mid-1970s, but that the percent of people saying they were “very happy” took an unpreceden­ted nosedive around 2016 — when the current era of political and social unrest began. Meanwhile, Gallup’s poll shows the least change, with only a slightly lower percent saying they’re “very happy” or “fairly happy” since 1949. These surveys all show very different trends, but the recent dip is cause for worry.

There are other indication­s of a long-term decline in Americans’ emotional well-being, especially among youth. A recent analysis of language patterns in books found more phrases associated with depression since the 1980s. Meanwhile, numerous studies show that young people are growing more socially isolated and disconnect­ed, reporting fewer close friendship­s and engaging in fewer romantic relationsh­ips.

How can Americans be happier?

So what can be done to make Americans happier? Rates of psychother­apy and antidepres­sant use have risen strongly, but while these probably help to some degree, they’ve failed to stem the tide of dissatisfa­ction, depression, loneliness and self-destructiv­e behavior. More fundamenta­l solutions are called for.

An obvious place to begin is economic support. The success of the COVID-19 relief bills showed that giving people cash is a viable policy for increasing material security throughout society; hopefully, programs like President Joe Biden’s child tax credit will increasing­ly be used to relieve the burdens of poverty, precarity and the bewilderin­g complexity and risk of modern life. Cash benefits could also compress the difference­s between social classes, making marriage a better propositio­n for the working class — positive family relationsh­ips are one of the key correlates of happiness. National health insurance would also take a huge burden off of many people’s minds.

Beyond economic programs, the country needs to address the root causes of unhappines­s. Here we’re mostly waiting for psychologi­sts to untangle exactly what’s getting Americans so down, but already we can start to see two likely culprits — social media and politic partisansh­ip.

Social media use is well known to correlate with symptoms of depression, as well as other mental health problems. There are some reasons to think it’s a causal effect. Heavier social media use in non-depressed young adults tends to predict developmen­t of depression later on. And in a 2019 study, a team of economists found that when experiment­al subjects were paid to turn off Facebook, they spent more time with humans in real life, and became happier.

This isn’t a slam-dunk case that social media is causing happiness to plummet. Various studies paint a picture of a complex relationsh­ip between social media and well-being. And social media is unlikely to be behind the rise in opiate and alcohol abuse and suicide among older Americans. But the effect of young people being constantly online — interactin­g through a highly attenuated communicat­ion medium, in networks that are unnatural in both shape and size — needs further study. Humans didn’t evolve to be buried in their phones all day, and we may be taking time to adapt to these strange new social relations.

Analyses like that of Blanchflow­er and Bryson — and the University of Chicago’s poll — suggest that the biggest problem for current U.S. happiness is political division and discord. Social strife began to rise with the disputed presidenti­al election of 2000, then increased with the war on terror and the Iraq War, and finally exploded into full-blown, perpetual open warfare in the mid-2010s. Social media, especially Twitter and much of Facebook, became a swamp of hatred and denunciati­on, with the loudest and most aggressive people in the country being given the biggest bullhorns.

How is it possible to be truly happy in a nation where half of your countrymen are your bitter enemies and you’re under constant danger of being denounced as a traitor by your own allies? For most normal human beings, it’s not possible. The radical polarizati­on of the parties, the bitter clashes of competing social movements, and the outrage-amplifying effect of social media have combined to produce a toxic soup in which only the most perverse can swim comfortabl­y.

Ultimately, in order for Americans to regain their emotional well-being and mental health, this age of unrest and division must end. Exactly how that happens, no one knows yet. But until it does, restoring general happiness in the U.S.

will be a tall order.

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