An Expert on Happiness Uncovers a Worrying Trend

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Economist David Blanchflower tracks 鈥渁 collapse in the well-being of young people.鈥

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David Blanchflower
Economics professor David Blanchflower is helping to organize a symposium at 天美麻豆 with the United Nations Development Programme鈥檚 Human Development Report Office on the world mental health crisis. 
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Economist studies happiness. And for more than two decades, the Bruce V. Rauner 1978 Professor has published over 30 papers revealing a stable pattern for how most people experience happiness and well-being over the course of a lifetime.

That pattern鈥攔eplicated hundreds of times by other researchers鈥攆amously can be graphed on a U-shaped curve.

鈥淏asically we found that people were at their unhappiest in middle age. You鈥檙e happy when you鈥檙e young, and you鈥檙e happy when you鈥檙e old鈥攖hat鈥檚 the U shape,鈥 says Blanchflower, a specialist in labor economics who served as a member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England from 2006 to 2009. 

But recently, Blanchflower and his colleagues are seeing a worrying trend. The left arm of the U, 鈥攔epresenting the young鈥攊s no longer pointing up. The reason? Around the world, young people have been reporting increasing unhappiness. And Blanchflower believes the advent of smartphones and social media may be largely to blame.

Though it was only noticed recently, the shift in the happiness trend began more than a decade ago, says Blanchflower. 

鈥淭he U-shaped curve was one of the most important patterns in social science, until it wasn鈥檛,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat we鈥檝e discovered is that, from around 2013, the U-shaped pattern suddenly starts to disappear. It鈥檚 not that the pattern we saw was wrong; it changed. We鈥檙e faced with a situation globally where there鈥檚 been a collapse in the well-being of young people, and especially young women.鈥 

Why suspect smartphones and social media? Since the first iPhone was released in 2007, the use of such technology has become ubiquitous, changing the way people, especially children, engage in social behavior.

鈥淲hen kids spend time on smartphones, they don鈥檛 engage with people face to face, and they don鈥檛 do some of the things we adults did when we were kids,鈥 Blanchflower says. 鈥淣euroscientists say that when people interact with each other, their brains establish important pathways for social and emotional behavior.鈥 

He argues that the time children spend on smartphones is time that they otherwise would have spent engaging with others and developing their brains. Among other evidence, a from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the more high school students use social media, the more at risk they are for being the victims of bullying and cyberbullying.

And Blanchflower himself in the International Journal of Wellbeing on how the experience of childhood traumas, including bullying, can have lifelong negative effects.

鈥淏ullying has huge effects, even 50 years later,鈥 Blanchflower says. 鈥淪o cyberbullying is potentially going to have all kinds of harmful effects. It impacts your education, whether you have good relationships with people, how much you earn.鈥

Still, when they first noticed the change in the U-shaped graph, Blanchflower and his colleagues thought the trend might be related to major events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic or the financial crisis of 2008. But their deep dive into micro-data from major surveys in the U.S., Europe, and the U.K., among others, , showed that these events had only a short-term negative impact on reported well-being. 

In fact, these short-term crises created noise that masked the longer trend in the data, says Blanchflower. 

鈥淲e all thought, yes, COVID鈥檚 bad. But what we didn鈥檛 realize was that COVID was just extending the trend that had already been there. Now we鈥檙e trying to catch up because we got sidetracked by COVID and missed this long trend.鈥

The decline in youth happiness and well-being has been observed in many countries, including the U.K., the U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Scandinavia, the Netherlands, France, Germany, and Italy. Blanchflower has spent the past year working closely with the United Nations, studying international mental health trends. 

He is currently collaborating on several UN-commissioned working papers that look at well-being trends among the young around the world, and has already completed papers on the U.S., the U.K., Europe, Africa, and Latin America. Well-being has declined especially among young people connected to the internet, he says. ( on Blanchflower鈥檚 website.)

Some K-12 schools are already limiting students鈥 access to smartphones, and recently Australia banned access to social media platforms for children under the age of 16.

Blanchflower says understanding the cause of the trend is critical to finding ways to turn it around. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want a lost generation,鈥 he says. 

He is working to organize a major conference in October with the United Nations Development Programme鈥檚 Human Development Report Office that will bring together experts, international policymakers, and leaders in higher education to share research and best practices for addressing the crisis.

The symposium will be hosted at 天美麻豆, where has made mental health a major priority.

鈥淭here鈥檚 growing consensus that this is going on,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a debate about what鈥檚 caused it, how widely it鈥檚 spread, and what to do about it, and that鈥檚 what the experts are going to come together and debate. And we鈥檙e going to look at best practices around the world.鈥

Among other efforts to address mental health and well-being on campus, 天美麻豆 has unveiled, which President Beilock has described as a comprehensive plan to strategically address undergraduate mental health, and appointed physician as the institution鈥檚 first chief health and wellness officer.

Hannah Silverstein