The value of human lives

We need ideals and romanticism to save the world.


Asad Zaman January 24, 2011

Human lives are infinitely precious. We have only a few moments to enjoy the wonders of creation and to experience the joys and tragedies of life. English philosopher David Hume shocked society when he first presented the idea that a human life could be priced at its economic value. Today, it has become commonplace, and arguing against it is considered idealistic and romantic. This cheapening of human lives has resulted in wars, destruction of habitats and dissolution of communities, all for a few dollars. Today, we need ideals and romanticism to save the world.

The idea that wealth will solve all human problems has been responsible for an immense amount of human misery in the 20th century. A tremendously influential economist, Keynes expressed this idea very clearly. He wrote that we must pretend that “fair is foul and foul is fair” and pursue the (false) gods of avarice and usury, for at least a hundred years. According to him, we will be able to afford to behave morally only after we have accumulated sufficient wealth. Only then will we be able to give up the distasteful, foul and disgusting ‘love of money’.

A generation of economists faithfully followed this Keynesian advice. The idea that wealth was meant for the enjoyment and welfare of human beings was replaced by the idea that human beings were a means towards the creation of wealth. Economists argued that the poor should be fed because that would increase their productivity as labourers, instead of arguing on grounds of compassion and humanity. Human beings became a ‘resource’ to be used as an input to production of wealth. Education became a means of providing people with skills valued on the job market, instead of the pursuit of knowledge for spiritual transformation and for understanding and changing the world for the better. Development was measured in dollars, instead of enhancement of human capacities for wisdom, love and respect for each other.

In implementing development policies for Pakistan designed by experts from Harvard, Mahbubul Haq recognised the need to sacrifice human lives to the gods of economic growth. He wrote that “economic growth is a brutal, sordid process... making the labourer produce more than he is allowed to consume for his immediate needs, and to reinvest the surplus thus obtained.” To his great credit, he learned from his experience. He was horrified by the outcome of these economic policies, which led to the concentration of wealth in the hands of the so-called ‘22 families’ and increase in the misery of millions. He eventually came to the conclusion that  “after many decades of development, we are rediscovering the obvious — that people are both the means and the end of economic development.” This crucial insight of Mahbubul Haq, born of bitter experience, is still not understood by economists and policy makers.

Making human lives a central concern would radically affect development policies. Economists routinely advise governments to let inefficient sectors collapse — this will lead to greater productivity when resources are shifted to other, more efficient sectors. The impact on the unemployed in the process does not figure in these calculations. In these cases, the cost-benefit analyses of economists pay no attention to the human factor, but only compute effects on wealth and productivity.

The economists’ paradigm is that by building industries, institutions and free markets, and encouraging capital accumulation through privitisation, we will create economic growth. Diametrically opposite to this idea is to concentrate on providing people with lives of meaning and dignity, supporting them on crucial dimensions of health, housing and education. People will then prove to be the engines of growth along all dimensions — social, political and economic.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 25th, 2011.

COMMENTS (1)

HIK | 13 years ago | Reply The day we start prioritizing human beings over easy money, Pakistan will progress. Everything will fall into its place, with peace prevalent.
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