Everyone Making More Progress Than You? Be Grateful

The economy is booming.  Stocks are through the roof.  And your neighbor, who just got a great new job, is putting a pool in the backyard.

Progress is great.  Unless, of course, it's not happening for you, according to newswise.com.

Economic progress can cause people to feel dispossessed and angry if they don’t feel like they are also advancing, a new study notes.
“The results indicate that a booming economy may not be the incumbent government’s sole insurance against loss of public support,” says Cecilia Hyunjung Mo of Vanderbilt University, one of three authors of the study, “Economic Development, Mobility, and Political Discontent."  “People must feel they are doing well and sharing society’s success.”
The study was conducted using face-to-face interviews in 2013-2014 in Pakistan, covering 2,090 households in 76 villages in the Punjab, Sidh and Kyber-Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) provinces. Subjects were divided into four groups.
  • Those primed into viewing themselves as poorer than average
  • Those influenced to feel that the Pakistani economy offers incredible opportunities for socio-economic mobility
  • Those who were primed into both the first two propositions
  • Those who weren’t influenced at all
“Among people with high aspirations, the combination of being made to feel that one’s society provides great opportunities for socio-economic mobility and being made to feel that one is relatively deprived and thus has been left behind fuels feelings of discontent with government,” reports Mo, assistant professor of political science at Vanderbilt. “Importantly, being primed to feel relatively poor alone did not spur dissatisfaction in nearly the same way that did the combination of feeling poor despite feeling that one lives in a mobile society.
“In the group receiving these combined messages, unmet aspirations eroded their confidence in government more than that of any other group.”
Now, even though this study was not conducted in America, there are certain parallels.  
Today’s “hyper-connected” world, courtesy of social media, makes it easier than ever to feel left behind, Mo explains.  "A barrage of visuals and messages on the ‘good life’ from broadcast and news media, as well as their Facebook feeds, can lead to a constant recalibration of an individual’s perception of their relative prosperity, potentially leading to feelings of dissatisfaction."
Now, who hasn't felt that their friends are doing better than they are, based on vacation pictures of surf, sand and straws bending in the breeze in beautifully colored drinks?
Governments need to ensure their high-aspiring citizens have access to growth opportunities around them, Mo clarifies.
“This is as true in high-income countries with disillusioned populations like the United States and the United Kingdom, as it is in low- and middle-income countries struggling with political instability, despite making significant governance reforms,” Mo concludes.
So, what do you do if you feel your friends -- and the world -- has left you behind?  Do what I do.  Look around you at all you have to be grateful for.  That pretty much solves the problem.




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