BigBallinStalin wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Unfortunately, GDP doesn't correlate well with quality of life, either. Grinding poverty is obviously an obstacle to having a good life, but once one reaches the satisfaction of basic needs, adding more wealth adds only tiny amounts of satisfaction. There are rapidly diminishing returns to adding more materialistic claptrap to your life, and the middle-class showoff with half-a-dozen ATVs in his garage rarely has time to ride any of them, and even then can only ride one at a time.
No, it's still a good enough proxy for cross-country comparisons--including quality of life. GDP has problems since it omits black market activities (or simply doesn't measure exchanges which are too difficult to calculate), so in this case it can underestimate actual GDP. We can also use life expectancy and mortality rates which are the industry standard for quality of life since they correlate so well with them.
I'm not familiar with the data on that, but the research is probably out there if you're interested.{It's out there. Let me show you some.}RE: underlined, well, that's just your opinion. You can't really speak for everyone else since value is subjective. The returns diminish quickly for you, but for others they don't, so... how would that affect your analysis?
No, it's not just my opinion. This is borne out by study after study.
First of all, Easterlin versus Wolfer:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101213151407.htmsciencedaily wrote:Across a worldwide sample of 37 countries, rich and poor, ex-Communist and capitalist, Easterlin and his co-authors shows strikingly consistent results: over the long term, a sense of well-being within a country does not go up with income.
In contrast to shorter-term studies that have shown a correlation between income growth and happiness, this paper, to be published the week of Dec. 13 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, examined the happiness and income relationship in each country for an average of 22 years and at least ten years.
"This article rebuts recent claims that there is a positive long-term relationship between happiness and income, when in fact, the relationship is nil," explained Easterlin, USC University Professor and professor of economics in the USC College of Letters, Arts & Sciences.
(The 2010 Easterlin study was a rebuttal to the 2008 Wolfer study, which in turn claimed to refute Easterlin's 1974 study. Bottom line, despite Wolfer's massively-publicized claims that money correlates with happiness, it is not broadly true, and can only be made true by radically narrowing the data set.)
The Diener & Seligman study:
Full study:
http://internal.psychology.illinois.edu/~ediener/Documents/Diener-Seligman_2004.pdfAn interesting little study from UBC:
http://dunn.psych.ubc.ca/files/2010/12/Money_giveth_money_taketh_away_-_Sept25.pdfMore important, Fischer and Boer:
Full study:
http://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/releases/psp-101-1-164.pdfabstract:
http://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2011/06/buy-happiness.aspxOne of the most significant findings of Fisher and Boer is this:
Fisher and Boer wrote:āAcross all three studies and four data sets, we observed a very consistent and robust finding that societal values of individualism were the best predictors of well-being,ā the authors wrote. āFurthermore, if wealth was a significant predictor alone, this effect disappeared when individualism was entered.ā
Countries with more freedom also tend to have more wealth. When numbers showing a correlation between GDP and happiness are filtered for freedom indicators, the correlation vanishes. Or put another way, wealth is wrongly getting the credit for happiness created by freedom.
Anyway, I leave you with all four of the above. Read them or don't, but it's definitely not "just my opinion."
BigBallinStalin wrote:Well, crime isn't caused by population density. You'd simply get more crime when you have more people around.
I addressed this already last time, and left you with another citation that you apparently didn't bother to look at:
Dukasaur wrote:http://people.su.se/~yvze0888/Model-NEG-Crime-05_April%202013.pdf1 Introduction
It is well documented that there is more crime in big than in small cities (Glaeser and
Sacerdote, 1999; Kahn, 2010). For example, the rate of violent crime in cities with more
than 250,000 population is 346 per 100,000 inhabitants whereas in cities with less than
10,000 inhabitants, the rate of violent crime is just 176 per 100,000 (Glaeser, 1998).
rate of violent crime in cities with more
than 250,000 population is 346 per 100,000 inhabitants whereas in cities with less than
10,000 inhabitants, the rate of violent crime is just 176 per 100,000 -- that's called a non-linear relationship. A non-linear relationship is evidence of causality. If "you'd simply get more crime with more people around" the relationship would be linear, but it's not. Higher population densities result in more crime per capita, because the dehumanizing influence of the overcrowding is a stressor that causes more conflict.
Dukasaur wrote:Conflict is a power function of population density. It's a function of other factors too, of course, but population density is the one that reigns unequivocal. Anybody who has ever raised rodents commercially can tell you that if you put twice as many rats in a cage, you will have four times as many fights. Humans are not that different from other animals. Give them their space and they'll be friendly and relaxed. Jam them into nightmare shitholes and they become aggressive and nasty.
The fundamental problem is managerial (government), in its inability to correctly allocate various resources and strategies for combating crime. Overcrowding in (government-owned) subways seems to me that the problem is obvious (it's government). If the government owned and/or controlled shoe production, we'd get surpluses and shortages where people seemingly fight for scarce shoes because "population pressure."
Sure, bad government exacerbates the stresses of population pressure. That doesn't mean the underlying stress isnt' there.
BBS wrote:Pollution's another issue which I could go on for days, but I'll keep it short. The negative externalities from pollution are fundamentally due to the courts inability to curb what are essentially trespasses of property (i.e. people dumping pollution in your yard and on your body, e.g. air pollution). Instead, the government plays games with voters over "environmental" regulation while wheeling and dealing with select business. Again, government--not growing population--is the main culprit here.
You always quote me these sophomoric arguments as if you've again forgotten that I wasted seven years of my life as a full-time Libertarian activist. I know all this, I can quote it as well as you can. Tragedy of the Commons, blah blah blah, entirely manageable through existing tort law if the tort law wasn't hamstrung by legislation, yadda yadda yadda. As a locksmith can pick his own lock, I can shred all these arguments that I once used.
I too will be brief, because I should be sleeping.
Tragedy of the Commons describes land, and on land it works well enough. Land can be subdivided and fenced off, and if I catch you throwing garbage on my lawn I can take you to court. All well and good, but it fails entirely when applied to the air and water.
Air and water cannot be subdivided and fenced off, and even though tiny portions of them can be, those portions cease to be part of the air and water. The point of the atmosphere and hydrosphere is that they circulate freely. They move solar heat, fresh water, and numerous essential elements from places on earth that have a surplus to places that have a shortage. Even if by some great expenditure you could fence off the air above your land, it would cease to be part of "the atmosphere" as we know it. By not circulating freely, it would fail to move moisture from the oceans to the land, it would fail to move heat from the tropics to the poles, it would fail to move oxygen from the jungles to the cities, and so on.
We can refuse to have a "Commons" on land, but we cannot refuse to have a "Commons" in the air and in the water, so Tragedy or no Tragedy, that is what we have to work with. It has to be treated as communal property because any non-communal use of it destroys its function.
Furthermore, assaults on this Commons cannot be assessed with any reliability. A molecule of sulfur dioxide from a Russian steel mill is exactly the same as a molecule of sulfur dioxide from an American steel mill. A molecule of benzene from a Chinese chemical plant is exactly the same as a molecule of benzene from a French chemical plant. So, while there might be some liability under tort law in a few extreme cases (someone directly downwind from a steel mill that is extraordinarily careless with emissions) most of us will never know, and can never know reliably, where the pollutants that are destroying our Commons are coming from. Tort law can never address this, because within any reasonable rules of evidence you will never be able to show that the molecule of benzene which gave you brain cancer came from a plastics factory in Shanghai or from my truck. This Commons will always be Common and a Communal solution will have to be found.