GNH Interview by BBS (Bhutan Broadcasting Service)
Understanding the Development Philosophy of Gross National Happiness
Dasho Karma Ura
President of The Centre for Bhutan Studies
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Audio: English (30 March 2008)
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Bhutan Broadcasting Service (BBS): Everybody—from the layperson to
the politician—is now talking about GNH. What are your views on this discussion
and are people getting it right as originally envisioned?
Dasho Karma Ura (KU): You ask my views on why GNH has become topical
these days and then the second part of your second question asks if they are talking
about it in the way it was originally envisioned. I think there are four main reasons
why GNH has become intensely topical these days. They are: (a) New institutional
structures and decision-making processes that better reflect GNH, (b) Presentation
of action plans or manifestos of political parties and prospective candidates with
GNH as their organizing principle, (c) Steady coverage of GNH issues by TV and newspapers,
both national and international—hardly a week goes by without some news on happiness
or Gross National Happiness around the world, and (d) Elaboration of GNH as a sound
concept and the construction of GNH indicators for application in plan and policy
formulation.
I would like to explain each of these four reasons in a little more detail.
a. With regard to new institutional structures and decision-making
processes that reflect GNH, there has been a profound institutional innovation,
as you know, crafted by His Majesty Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck. His Majesty
established a new institutional mandala of GNH, so to speak, when, in January 2008
the GNH Commission was founded in order to function as the apex strategic body for
the nation. The decision to open GNH committees at the ministerial, dzongkhag (district)
and gewog (block) levels was also announced by the Prime Minister. These changes
more clearly define the structures and processes of decision making unique to a
GNH state. By the way, our constitution describes the state and the government as
having responsibilities to pursue GNH. GNH should become a serious arbitrator of
public policies and plans from now onwards. Correspondingly, there must be institutions
to apply this to policy and programme formulation. The recently created institutions
and processes will take this role by forging stronger and clearer links between
concepts of GNH and their application Dasho Karma Ura GNH Interview 2 to policy
and programme formulation. What I expect from these changes is that GNH will shape
the nature of our political economy, our legal foundation, our health and education
systems, and so forth, much more distinctively in the course of time.
b. The action plans and manifestos of political parties and candidates
have popularized GNH among the ordinary people, and they have done it very extensively
and directly by word of mouth, not through media or television. This creature called
GNH is now, more than ever, a puzzling thing in the people’s mind. The candidates
and the parties have often presented GNH in terms of fulfilling objective goods
and services; I am sure the dialogue will become more complex and nuanced in the
future, by taking account of subjective aspects of GNH as well.
c. The third reason concerns GNH as a point of discourse in the media.
The discourse that television, radio, and newspapers have conducted is vital in
stimulating and deepening a popular conceptualization of GNH outside of academic
research groups—the public also needs to understand it and needs to contribute to
its formulation. That is a very vital role that the media has played. GNH itself
has appealed to journalists both national and international, and there is some inherent
power in the idea of GNH, that is why there is coverage. Part of the international
coverage on GNH is a shared curiosity: What is this country doing? That sort of
attitude stimulates their coverage. There is also a part, which is very serious,
which reflects a deep-seated search for genuine, alternative, holistic development.
That is why GNH sometimes appears in very scholarly books and academic journals.
Here, we have to pay tribute to His Majesty the Fourth King of Bhutan, the true
author of GNH, and also pay homage and tribute to the carrier of the GNH legacy,
His Majesty the Fifth King of Bhutan.
d. Finally, the discussion on GNH, at a slightly more academic level,
is fueled by the elaboration of the concepts of GNH by research organizations such
as CBS. This is also true for the discussion on the construction of GNH indicators,
which also involves the drafting of GNH policy screening tools and GNH projection
prioritization tools.
The second part of your question asks whether all of this chatter and conversation
on GNH are true to the original intention and proposition of His Majesty the Fourth
King. Let’s go back to the time when His Majesty was still a teenage monarch, when
in 1972 he spoke to an American newspaper about GNH and questioned the then prevailing
assumption that GDP alone could deliver happiness and wellbeing to society. It was
really a breath-takingly bold and profound question, Dasho Karma Ura GNH Interview
3 moreso because it came out of the mind of a teenager. The world-wide development
experience of the last 36 years shows his question to be absolutely pertinent, because
much of economic development has failed, somehow, providing satisfaction, especially
in the industrialized wealthy north where the level of satisfaction is stagnating
although economic prosperity is going up. As so happens with born leaders, his insights
were ahead of his time by decades.
In the reign of the Fourth King, the actual road map for good development in terms
of corresponding laws and polices were developed, and we enjoy that legacy now.
As inferred from his kashos and other proclamations or other policies heavily influenced
by him, he firmly believed that happiness is an indicator, is a signifier, is a
sign of good development and good society. He also believed in the legitimacy of
public deliberation, public discussion, and public opinion in defining any goal,
whether it is GNH or something else, through democracy and enlightened citizenship.
That is why we are where we are with political parties, discourse, voting, and so
forth. His visions of GNH and democracy for our country are complementary. We must
strive to be loyal to both aspects of his vision; with democracy, through enlightened
citizenship, and enlightened views of citizenship, we will come to prefer collective
happiness as the goal of society.
BBS: What does GNH really mean, especially considering that different
people have different views on GNH?
KU: There are two parts to your question. What does GNH mean really,
for an ordinary citizen? The second part asks how we can consensually define GNH
in light of its diverse interpretations. Let me answer the first part of your question.
Overall, GNH means the creation of a society or nation in which collective happiness
is the goal of governance. The purpose of government would be to create more collective
happiness. Now, a society is not created, as you know, in a single moment by a god
or something like that. What it means is that a society adjusts and adapts increasingly
towards certain goals it defines for itself, in this case: collective happiness.
Why do you have to adapt and adjust? Because there barriers and competing ideas
that may take you in different directions. This is the present experiment taking
place in Bhutan; there are competing and conflicting interests and challenges that
can take us in a different direction. But if you are very conscious and wish to
pursue it, you can design a society in that way. We have had this experiment initiated
and guided by the enlightened leadership of their Majesties the Fourth and Fifth
Kings. It is also partly true that such adaptations are continuations of efforts
in Bhutan’s past; documents as far back as 1695, and again in one legal code of
1795, it mentions explicitly that the purpose of governance as happiness (generally
referred to as dewa). Dasho Karma Ura GNH Interview 4 When we say that collective
happiness is the goal of governance, GNH should not be misunderstood, as a kind
of simple, reductionist concept where citizens are only concerned with happiness
for themselves, obsessed with feeling pleased. This is not the view. Nor is the
view correct that under GNH the government would just maximize aggregate happiness.
If it were, it is too simplistic, and many objections would arise to this type of
thinking. GNH is a very rich development philosophy and it is also an enlightened
personal ethos. Objections that Bhutan will maximize subjective happiness are quite
misplaced. Suppose if I just think of you as a pleasure-maximizing being, and I
am not concerned with justice, compassion, and so forth, all I would do is feed
you some drugs and you would be happy. Though I could keep you in that position,
there is no humanity in that approach.
So GNH really stands for a holistic concept guiding governance and development;
it also stands for the holistic needs of the people. These needs include physical
needs (we must not be in poor circumstances where our body and soul are torn apart)
and it recognizes emotional needs, spiritual needs, social needs, economic needs,
so and so forth. Secondly, GNH stands for preservation and renewal of a holistic
range of wealth or capital. Wealth is not exactly the right word, because when we
talk about wealth, we normally talk about material things, so maybe we should use
the word capital. In that respect, it is not only economic wealth or capital, which
is measured well by GDP, but there are also other capitals which we should value
and measure: ecological capital; social capital, things like trust, reciprocity,
positive emotions; human resource capital; and cultural and spiritual capital. If
we value and measure the ups and downs of all these capitals over time, then we
get a true picture of whether society is developing or regressing. If we just focus
on measures of economic capital and omit our attention to what is happening to other
forms of capital, we may found ourselves oneday facing great costs and our lives
quite impoverished. For this reason, in GNH we take account of a wider set of resources
and point out that these must be preserved if we are to continue pursuing collective
happiness in a holistic way. Measuring GDP alone will not tell us enough about holistic
development. This was the essence of the message His Majesty communicated when he
said that “GNH is more important than GDP”. The understanding of what humans need
to make them happy is quite comprehensive in GNH. Equally comprehensive is the range
of wealth as capital that we should value and cherish.
GNH, as you can see, is quite holistic in its approach, in part because it addresses
development at two levels. At one level, it addresses material needs on the physical
realm. It also addresses the inner, invisible realm—the intangible things. Wellbeing
also accrues from the intangible side. Addressing needs at the outer physical realm
and the inner, mental invisible realm corresponds to subjective and Dasho Karma
Ura GNH Interview 5 objective conditions of life. Subjective conditions, at the
end, are what you feel from objective stimuli or material circumstances. Development
has to be assessed on whether indicators of both subjective and objective realities
are moving ahead. If one is moving ahead and the other is stuck—that’s also good.
If one is regressing and the other is stuck, that’s quite bad, and if both are regressing—
that’s terrible. So the assessment of the progress of society must include a blend
of subjective and objective indicators.
The most interesting challenge is how GNH is translated into practice at the policy
and programme level, as well as at the level of individual behaviour. We citizens
must also have a different kind of attitude and behaviour if we are to obtain and
contribute to collective happiness. In regard to the implementation at policy and
programme level, recent developments consist of the creation of the GNH commission
and GNH committees at various levels of government. Complimenting these Royal initiatives
is the introduction of GNH indicators.
We have to adopt GNH indicators. Some people dismiss it at as superfluous, unnecessary,
mathematical, statistical…but in any case we are being governed and ruled by numbers,
as you know. We look at numbers to tell stories about where we are going. If you
use the conventional indicators, they express a different set of values. If the
underlying values are different, which I am sure they are bound to be if we are
professing GNH, then the type of indicators we use should also be different from
conventional indicators. Indicators as targets display our purpose and progress,
helping us navigate our socioeconomic journeys towards them. However, we need other
tools to steer towards social targets before we know, through impact studies, whether
we are walking in the right direction.
To navigate ourselves towards GNH targets, we need pro-GNH project selection tools
and pro-GNH screening tools so that the policies and programmes we select are aligned
directly with the targets of GNH. The GNH commission and GNH committees will be
adopting these GNH instruments to translate GNH from philosophy to practice. I mentioned
before how GNH captures a holistic range of capital or wealth, both tangible and
intangible. Our GNH indicators, policy screening tools and project prioritization
tools must also have an equally broad scope of concern. In line with this, GNH indicators
include many components like subjective happiness, mental health, emotional balance,
spirituality, culture, human rights, trust, social support, education, health, living
standard and ecology.
As regards your question on the diverse of opinions on GNH, several points must
be made. Firstly, you mentioned that different groups have different interpretations
of GNH, and that there can be disagreement on that point. Is there a way we can
converge on some acceptable definition? While we measure levels of subjective Dasho
Karma Ura GNH Interview 6 happiness, there is no need for individually reported
happiness levels (in our survey on a 1- 10 scale) to converge on the same meaning.
All that is required is for you to be able to rate your happiness level sincerely
on a 1 – 10 scale. What makes you happy at that particular moment is entirely up
to you, there’s no need to verify that further. If you are talking about subjective
happiness in this manner, there is no need for us to converge on any definition
in which we all agree.
Now, at a more conceptual level, the goal of GNH in terms of governance, as well
as individual pursuit, is collective happiness, as opposed to individualistic or
private happiness. The means of obtaining happiness will certainly differ according
to tastes, age profile, capacities and other orientations of the individuals—there’s
enough room for you to enjoy liberty. But, from a GNH point of view, the most important
thing is that the individual should not achieve his happiness at whatever cost to
society—either human or other beings. Otherwise, if you achieve your happiness by
passing your costs to others, by passing negative consequences on to others, collective
happiness is not possible. In order to achieve our collective happiness, we can
elevate our vision beyond irresponsible and egocentric happiness maximization. If
people say that what makes me happy is my business, that is absolutely true—the
only thing is that as we live in a society we ought to limit the externalities and
the negative consequences of obtaining our own happiness, to a reasonable degree.
There is also some doubt on whether individual choice and decision can always, unmistakably,
lead to their happiness. We all very well know that we choose wrong alternatives,
such as the purchase of goods, for example, which we later on find out to be not
that crucial for happiness. Our choice made at one moment may even lead to rethinking
at a future moment, take marriages for example. Our judgment and our choices are
not always correct. We can learn much more from happiness literature and studies
how to improve our chances of obtaining happiness.
From a Buddhist point of view, we as people are prone to illusory focus, leading
us to behaviors and judgment that make our lifecourses deviate from happiness. The
teachings enjoin us all the time to be aware of that fact. Once again, it brings
us back to the point that the individuals may strive for happiness by their own
effort…but the fact remains that if the government does not create macroconditions
and policies which are pro-happiness, then the individual’s chances of succeeding
are lower and narrower. Take the domains for example: environment, community relationships,
good governance, health, education, etc.—all of these are very important areas that
affect our satisfaction and happiness. These things are influenced by public policy.
If public policy is wrong, then the chance for us to Dasho Karma Ura GNH Interview
7 realize our wellbeing or happiness through these areas is greatly decreased.
BBS: When we talk about GNH we talk about the four pillars. What
is the actual significance behind them and how do they relate to the nine domains
of GNH?
KU: The specifications of GNH in terms of the architecture of four
pillars is quite popular. In fact, even without understanding GNH very well, people
are able to enumerate four pillars. The four pillars evoke and capture the imagination
more easily. At the same time, the metaphor of four pillars is restrictive as it
is not all-embracing or encompassing as GNH itself. What the four pillar framework
succeeds in doing is drawing attention to the four policy-bundle priorities of economy,
culture, environment and good governance as supportive of GNH. No doubt, these are
vital as contributory policy areas for collective happiness. Now we need to enrich
the framework of GNH, which requires drawing on all the relevant domains or factors
which are vital to the concept and practice of GNH. That is why the concept and
indicators of GNH now include other vital areas such as community vitality, time
use, health, education and psychological wellbeing in addition to the four pillars
as previously conceived. Now, the exact title of these domains does not really matter,
the essential thing is that all we value and cherish as a society that contribute
to our collective happiness must be reflected and must not be omitted.
BBS: What will be the result if GNH is fully integrated into the
national planning and policymaking process?
KU: Your question is a little more futuristic in the sense that
we have to wait to see the results, however, there are results we can readily see
as a consequence of past GNH policies and laws. Though the laws and policies did
not explicitly take into account GNH, the policymakers and lawmakers in those days
intuitively tried to address GNH and incorporate it, although there were no systematic,
explicit criteria of GNH which they applied to policies or draft laws and so forth.
The right values in the heart of institutions, and in those people running institutions,
ensured that policies were pro-GNH. People had the motivations to work towards the
collective happiness of the people of Bhutan.
But now we must understand that development is a non-linear process—things can backfire.
The situation is changing; the pace is rapid and the side effects of development
are becoming more noticeable in social, cultural and ecological terms. In ecological
terms we already get a sense of pollution in the air and on the horizon. In social
terms, migration is posing problems on both sides: congestion Dasho Karma Ura GNH
Interview 8 and urban lifestyles and, on the other side, empty villages, older people
on their own. Equally on the cultural side you can see challenges to Bhutanese values
and institutions. There are noticeable side effects and one aspect of GNH is to
prevent these costs right at the conception of development.
We need to think, and have methodologies of thinking, in order to conduct socioeconomic
development far more integratively and far less sectorally. To continuing working
holistically towards GNH, we should see reality as one, not as fragmented sectors
like health, education, environment, culture, roads, economy and so forth. That
sectoral drive may deliver success in that one sector, but it also makes costs emerge
in another sector. For example, the success in enrollment as emerged as a challenge
in employment. Success in urbanization and industrialization can emerge as costs
in the environmental sector. Success in the physical or material realm may reappear
as costs in social or emotional terms—people becoming richer, but also not happier;
places with high living standards may have very low wellbeing standards. That type
of integrated thinking has to occur at the high level of planning—not at a professional
or technical level where specialization leads to a narrow conception and delivery
of services.
Our five year plan is an aggregations of numerous, perhaps 500 or so, projects.
It is difficult to see the fine interconnection between each of these projects acting
as a component of social and economic change and the sum total of their effects
on the each of the various dimensions of GNH. Nevertheless, that is what holistic
planning requires; you must be able to see the effects and side-effects of each
project on the other, as well as the sum total effect on the society. You asked
what will be the result if we apply GNH into the planning process. While the 10th
Five Year Plan has already been molded to some extent, some effort has to be made
to alter projects, where necessary, from the GNH point of view. Perhaps, discussions
on GNH policy and project criteria will assist in generating an additional series
of projects that directly embody GNH concerns.
BBS: If you talk to a group of lay people or young students how
will you make them understand what GNH intrinsically means?
KU: I think conveying GNH to lay people and students will involve
quite different methods and substance. Take the case of students, first. They are
largely young, below 15, and full of hopes and idealism—that may be largely met
because of the highly progressive nature of society. But as it is with life, a good
proportion of them will also find that their aspirations can’t be met—they have
to reconcile with something else. Most of these young people, 92% or so thanks to
the massive education movement of our government, are enrolled in our schools. The
education sector is confronted with the choice of Dasho Karma Ura GNH Interview
emphasizing literacy skills, employment skills, or values. Whatever emphasis they
choose, young people need to have an intellectual standpoint for life as a whole
so that the disruptive and dislocating experience of adolescence can be enclosed
within a larger context. I think that can be affected by a simplified version of
GNH.
For the youth as a whole, I would suggest a greater understanding of emotions and
values. In particular, finding emotional balance between negative and positive emotions
is critical for the youth in moderating the vulnerability and disruption experienced
in the process of maturation. In GNH, the aspects of emotional balance and values
in the domain of psychological wellbeing is very well detailed, so they can explore
this domain and get something out of it—not everything in GNH is going to be useful
at that stage in life. This is a more special thrust applicable to the challenges
of youth.
Now for the second group, lay people, who are mostly village-farmers and householders,
I would suggest, among other aspects, community relationships for particular attention.
The bonds between the members of a community feed and thrive on trust, volunteerism,
reciprocity and cooperation, because they are bounded geographically and socially,
and they have to work out a way of living harmoniously. Conflicts and litigations,
divorces and factionalism signal the breakdown of this social bond and the collapse
of peace and harmony in the community. Underlying all of this is the breakdown of
relationships. Community at the end is sustained by good, positive relationships
among its members.
Relationships, or shared situations, are where happiness spontaneously arises—you
are not looking for happiness, but it comes out when relationships improve. Relationships
are fundamental to happiness. When the quality and the direction of relationships
improve you feel happier. We can have better relations, not necessarily when we
have more money, more goods or better houses, but especially when we have better
motivations and intentions—that heals you. In this respect, if we cannot maintain
healthy relationships in family and community, they will arise as costs to the judiciary
and law enforcement agencies, for whose service we have to pay through taxes and
other revenues. In themselves, good relationship, community vitality, sense of trust,
reciprocity, volunteerism, etc., are important, but if these breakdown it also saps
the resources of the country. You have to invest more money in the judiciary to
solve divorces and conflict litigation. You have to spend more money on policing
and security apparatus. In some sense, happiness is really a by-product of improving
relationships; it is wrong to focus all the time on objective conditions as giving
you happiness. It can come from these kind of processes and relationships. You can
also understand development ultimately as improvement in the relational capacity
of people. |
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