Money Cant Buy Happiness. Er, Can It?
Money Can’t Buy Happiness. Er, Can It?
金钱能够购买幸福吗?你说说看。经济学家的笔触也是很散文化的,读来动人......
Money Can’t Buy Happiness. Er, Can It?

By PAUL KRUGMAN
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- A few weeks ago my wife and 
I finally gave in to the pressures of modern 
life and acquired a cell phone. But it turned 
out that once we had the thing we had a few 
questions -- questions we couldn’t get answered, 
because customer service was swamped with 
similar calls from the thousands of other people 
who had recently signed on. 
Meanwhile, my parents started calling 
contractors about some minor work on their house 
-- only to be told that every carpenter and 
plumber in the area was booked well into next 
year. 
Talk to almost any middle-CLASS American, and 
you will hear similar stories -- about poor 
service, excessive traffic, overpriced housing 
and so on. In fact, there seems to be a sort of 
rising chorus of complaints about the annoyances 
of prosperity -- complaints, in effect, that 
spending lots of money isn’t as gratifying as 
people expected it to be. Most of this is petty 
stuff, but it is just possible that the chorus 
of complaints marks the beginning of a broader 
shift in attitudes -- a shift that will be 
healthy if it doesn’t come too quickly. 
Of course, people don’t complain about the 
disappointments of prosperity unless they are 
prosperous, and in a way all this whining is a 
symptom of a remarkably successful era in 
American economic history. Still, you don’t have 
to be an ascetic to wonder if there isn’t 
something a bit manic about the pace of getting 
and -- especially -- spending in fin-de-siècle 
America. 
Even the dry statistics suggest that something a 
little strange is going on. Consider: we are now 
eight years into an economic expansion. Consumer 
spending traditionally lags behind the economy 
as a whole in boom times, because families 
figure that times will not always be that good 
and that they should save for a rainy day. 
This time, however, consumers are leading the 
charge: while the economy expanded an impressive 
4 percent between the first quarter of 1998 and 
the first quarter of 1999, consumption grew 5.5 
percent, and spending on consumer durables -- 
cell phones, bathroom fixtures, S.U.V.’s and 
home entertainment systems -- surged an 
incredible 12 percent. 
There are at least two reasons to question 
whether America’s consumption boom is really a 
good thing. 
One is that by conventional standards, the 
typical American family is being a bit, well, 
imprudent in spending so much -- indeed, 
personal savings, never high in this country, 
have now disappeared almost completely. True, 
millions of families have seen their wealth 
surge because of a soaring stock market, but 
while more people than ever own stock, most 
still have no significant personal stake in the 
market. 
You might argue that ordinary families are 
spending freely, despite sluggish wage growth, 
because they believe that prosperity is here to 
stay. But survey evidence suggests that many 
workers remain nervous about job security, a 共2页,当前第1页12
nervousness that manifests itself in a 
surprising reluctance to demand wage increases. 
So why is spending so high? Much of the surge is 
driven by those families that do own a lot of 
stock and have been willing to treat recent 
capital gains not only as durable but as likely 
to continue. And at least some of the rest is 
the result of what Robert Frank calls luxury 
fever: families with annual incomes of $30,000 
try to emulate the consumption of those with 
$60,000, who try to emulate those with $120,000, 
and so on. Ultimately we are all trying to keep 
up with the Gateses, and some of us really can’t 
afford it. 
And this leads to a deeper concern: there is 
good reason to think that even those consumers 
who can afford all this spending will eventually 
find that they can’t get no satisfaction. It is 
hard to talk about this without sounding either 
moralistic or supercilious, but it turns out 
that the folk wisdom is backed by hard 
statistical evidence: you really can’t buy 
happiness, certainly not for society as a whole. 
Partly this is because of congestion effects 
like the ones my family is experiencing: when 
few people have cars, the one-car family is 
king, but when everyone has two, a lot of time 
is spent in traffic jams. 
A more important point, probably, is that human 
beings are hard-wired to judge themselves not by 
their absolute standard of living, but in 
comparison to others. It may be true that in 
material terms today’s borderline poor live as 
well as the upper-middle CLass did a few decades 
back, but that does not stop them from feeling 
poor. And consumer spending ultimately 
disappoints because of habituation: once you 
have become accustomed to a given standard of 
living, the thrill is gone. 
But there is one very powerful argument that can 
be made on behalf of recent American 
consumerism: not that it is good for consumers, 
but that it has been good for producers. You 
see, spending may not produce happiness, but it 
does create jobs, and unemployment is very 
effective at creating misery. 
Better to have manic consumers, American style, 
than the depressive consumers of Japan -- a 
country where the only consumer durables that 
have sold well the last few years are home 
safes, the better to hoard cash in. 
This attempt to keep up with people richer than 
ourselves, however ineffectual it may have been 
on its own terms, has allowed the United States 
economy to sail through a global financial storm 
unscathed, and arguably made the difference 
between a global wobble and a repeat of the 
1930’s. 
There is a strong element of rat race in 
America’s consumer-led boom, but those rats 
racing in their cages are what have kept the 
wheels of commerce turning. And while it will be 
a shame if Americans continue to compete over 
who can own the most toys, the worst thing of 
all will be if the competition comes to a sudden 
stop. 
Now there are faint hints in popular culture -- 
though certainly not yet in the spending numbers 
-- that Americans are starting to become 
disillusioned with high consumption, that in 
years to come the American consumer will become 
wiser and more prudent. Let’s hope it really 
happens -- but not too fast. 
Paul Krugman is an economics professor at M.I.T. 
and the author, most recently, of "The Return of 
Depression Economics."