Paul Goble
Staunton, Feb. 10 – The residents of regions in the Russian Federation that are not doing well according to economic statistics often say they are happier than do their counterparts in places where the economic statistics are better, according to a survey of Russians across that country conducted by the Rabota portal.
Given that many people expect the reverse to be true and that many leaders conduct themselves and especially their electoral campaigns on the basis of false assumption, it is important that everyone understand this “happiness paradox” (press.rabota.ru/issledovaniye-gde-zhivut-samyye-schastlivyye-rossiyane commented upon at club-rf.ru/theme/640).
There are three key reasons for the divergence between objective economic measures and subjective personal assessments of happiness, all of which need to be understood by political leaders perhaps especially when they are involved in election campaigns, like the one beginning for deputies to the Duma.
First of all, the survey shows that the main sources of happiness for people in Russia are their families and their personal ties with others, approximately twice as large a share as those saying that infrastructure is important to their happiness, however much they may complain about this or that shortcoming.
Second, when leaders promote the economic achievements of their regions frequently as is the case in regions where things are going well as far as those are concerned, then residents are likely to be more unhappy if the situation in their everyday lives involving such things as road quality and health care lag behind.
And third, in many federal subjects of the Russian Federation, those regions that are doing well as measured by economic figures often are achieving that because of sectors like oil refining or the military-industrial complex that do not touch most residents most of the time, thus leading to a gap between economic statistics and the happiness people say they feel.