Good Enough for Government Work? Life-Evaluation and Public Policy

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Good Enough for Government Work? Life-Evaluation and Public Policy
Abstract
A life-evaluation question asks a person to quantify his or her overall satisfaction with life, at the time when the question is asked. If public policy seeks to make individuals’ lives better, does it follow that changes in aggregate life-evaluations track policy success? This paper argues that life-evaluation is a practical and philosophically sound way to measure and predict welfare for the purpose of analyzing policy options. This is illustrated by the successful argument for expanding state-funded mental health services in the United Kingdom. However, life-evaluations sometimes fail to adequately measure individual welfare. Policy analysts therefore must sometimes inquire into the extent to which individuals’ preferences would be fulfilled, if different policies were to be adopted. This article proposes synthesizing life-evaluation and preference-fulfilment data about individual welfare, as a basis for welfare-consequentialist policy analysis.
Publication
Journal of Happiness Studies
Volume
22
Issue
3
Pages
1119-1140
Date
2021/03/01
Journal Abbr
J Happiness Stud
Language
en
ISSN
1573-7780
Short Title
Good Enough for Government Work?
Accessed
1/21/25, 8:06 PM
Library Catalog
link-springer-com.ledproxy2.uwindsor.ca
Rights
2020 Springer Nature B.V.
Extra
Company: Springer Distributor: Springer Institution: Springer Label: Springer Number: 3 Publisher: Springer Netherlands
Citation
Semple, N. (2021). Good Enough for Government Work? Life-Evaluation and Public Policy. Journal of Happiness Studies, 22(3), 1119–1140. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10902-020-00266-0