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Wealth Inequality Means We're Less Joyous Over Rising GDP - Study

In comments that are likely to fuel demands for tax redistribution, academics from the UK and US argue that rising GDP will not boost wellbeing as much as it should if inequality is rising.
Rising inequality in wealth blunts the supposed positive effects
of an expanding economy, academics argue in a report that is
likely to drive calls for wealth redistribution.
Research by Selin Kesebir, assistant professor of organisational
behaviour, London Business School, and Shigehiro Oishi, professor
of psychology, University of Virginia, finds that a country's
economic growth only makes its citizens happier if the gains are
evenly spread.
"We find that an increase in GDP only makes us happier if wealth
is evenly distributed. Countries with growing income inequality
often fail to increase average happiness, even if they succeed in
boosting GDP. We know that happier people are also more
productive, so this really matters. Even wealth distribution
should create a virtuous cycle - more happy people, more
productively contributing to the country's economic growth,” Dr
Kesebir said.
"When wealth is concentrated among a small group it evokes a
sense of unfairness among the rest of society ," Dr Kesebir
said.
The comments add to those such as those of controversial French
academic Thomas Piketty, whose book Capital in the 21st
Century claimed that the richest owners of capital will see
their capital outpace overall GDP growth and eventually produce a
social and political backlash.
Piketty's arguments are controversial because it is claimed there
is no reason why, over the long run, capital growth should
outpace the growth of an overall economy. This is because
capital, to grow, must be applied to labour and other factors of
production. Capital-owners typically run down their assets in old
age rather than accumulate them for no reason, particularly as
risk appetite fluctuates over timespans. Another point of
controversy is that redistributive taxes, so those on the free
market side of the argument say, actually lead to the richest
paying a smaller, rather than larger, share of total revenue, as
well as hurting growth.
In the latest research, the academics examine the relationship
between GDP per capita and happiness in two different data sets
covering 34 nations in total. These sets consist of 16
developed nations and 18 developing Latin American nations.
The researchers found that economic growth had a less positive
and more negative effect on happiness as income inequality
increased, a finding which potentially has implications for
economic policy in both developed and emerging nations.
(To see a review of the Piketty book by this publication, see here.)