| Faith
Can Enrich More Than the Soul
By: Felicia R. Lee
January 31, 2004, New
York Times
Forget investment and
savings rates, worker productivity and wage scales to determine
which countries will become richer or poorer. What really stimulates
economic growth is whether you believe in an afterlife -- especially
hell.
At least that's what two Harvard scholars have found
after analyzing data collected in 59 countries between 1981 and
1999.
"Our central perspective is that religion affects
economic outcomes mainly by fostering religious beliefs that
influence individual traits such as honesty, work ethic, thrift and
openness to strangers," the researchers, Robert J. Barro and Rachel
M. McCleary, wrote in a recent issue of American Sociological
Review. (They also happen to be married.) "For example, beliefs
in heaven and hell might affect those traits by creating perceived
rewards and punishments that relate to 'good' and 'bad' lifetime
behavior."
The data comes from six international surveys,
including ones by Gallup, the World Bank and researchers at the
University of Michigan. They include questions about attendance in
places of worship and religious beliefs. There were four measures of
economic development: per capita gross domestic product, educational
attainment by adults, the urbanization rate and life expectancy.
Oddly enough, the research also showed that at a certain
point, increases in church, mosque and synagogue attendance tended
to depress economic growth. Mr. Barro, a renowned economist, and Ms.
McCleary, a lecturer in Harvard's government department, theorized
that larger attendance figures could mean that religious
institutions were using up a disproportionate share of resources.
"It's all been rather surprising," Ms. McCleary said."People
didn't believe you could quantify aspects of religion. We wanted to
be intellectually provocative. We see about five more years of study
to get out all the stuff we want. We're trying to raise interesting
questions in a different way."
Since the German sociologist
Max Weber wrote about the Protestant work ethic and the spirit of
capitalism, social scientists have argued that culture -- including
religious habits -- is part of the complex mix that determines a
country's economic health. What distinguishes the work of Mr. Barro
and Ms. McCleary, some scholars said, is that it uses a
sophisticated analysis of a huge set of data to quantify the
arguments of anthropologists, sociologists and political scientists.
"The study's important less for what they found than that
they looked," said Mark Chaves, a professor of sociology at the
University of Arizona, in Tucson. "They are not the first to look at
this but they are the first to look at this as systemically and as
rigorously as they have. For forever, people have been saying that
culture matters in analyzing economies."
"I think this is a
new beginning for the rigorous relationship between religion and
economic development, " added Mr. Chaves, whose forthcoming book
examines how religious congregations influence politics and culture.
"They've given us a data set and some tools to examine this in a new
way."
One of the motivations for undertaking the study, Ms.
McCleary said, was that empirical research on economic growth
typically neglected religion's influence.
The research team
also wants to look at how religion affects other political and
social issues like democracy, the rule of law, fertility and health.
At the moment, they have a paper on government and the regulation of
religion that is under review by the American Journal of
Sociology at the University of Chicago.
Some of their
findings, which have been written about in The Economist
and The Christian Science Monitor, first appeared in
2002 as a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research.
As the couple began their study, Ms. McCleary said, it was
clear that the widely discussed secularization thesis -- the idea
that a country becomes more secular as it becomes richer and more
industrialized -- did not apply to the United States, one of the
most religious nations in the world.
And over the last 30
years, many East Asian countries, including Malaysia, Singapore and
South Korea, have experienced both rapid economic growth and the
spread of Christianity, Mr. Barro said.
"South Korea is a
good example of that rapid growth and more religion," he said. There
the number of converts from Confucianism and other Eastern religions
to Christianity is growing rapidly, he explained.
Some of
the lowest levels of religiosity were found in China and North
Korea. The lowest levels of economic growth were in sub-Saharan
African countries. The former East Germany (which includes Weber's
birthplace) was one of the lowest in both religiosity and growth.
But one of the major challenges to such research is that
countries that vary in their religious beliefs and practices also
vary in ways that have nothing to do with religion, said
Paola Sapienza, a professor of finance at Northwestern
University. "Are you really picking up religion or
something that correlates with it, like certain laws or social and
economic institutions?" she asked.
Last year, in the
Journal of Monetary Economics, Ms. Sapienza and her
colleague Luigi Zingales, at the University of Chicago, and Luigi
Guiso, at the University of Sassari in Rome, published a paper that
did not compare countries but looked at the relationship between
religious beliefs and the attitudes shown to foster economic growth.
"On average," they wrote, "religious beliefs are associated with
good economic attitudes, where good is defined as conducive to
higher per capita income."
But that study found that more
religious people were also less tolerant of other races and
nationalities and had more negative attitudes toward women. The
study based its findings on World Values Surveys data collected at
the University of Michigan.
Mr. Barro and Ms. McCleary also
used data from the World Values Surveys, which Ronald Inglehart, a
political scientist at the University of Michigan, has been taking
for more than 20 years. His surveys of 78 countries show strong
links between widespread public values and beliefs, or political
culture, and motivation to work, sexual and religious norms and the
presence or absence of democratic institutions.
"I find that
belief factors play a major role in economic growth, but here is one
of the world's leading economists saying so," Mr. Inglehart said,
referring to Mr. Barro. "When Weber argued that big breakthroughs in
economic growth were in Protestant countries, it was at a time when
many cultures were shaped by Protestant institutions. His notion in
the broadest sense is that belief factors play a role in economic
factors."
"This is a revised view of the Protestant ethic,"
he continued. He noted that many mostly Protestant, wealthy
countries were now more interested in quality of life, and that many
Eastern countries were now more focused on economic growth -- with
some populations even converting, as Mr. Barro noted, to
Christianity and specifically to Protestantism.
"Confucian
countries are now the most Protestant countries on earth, in terms
of a moral imperative to work hard, save money, to do well," Mr.
Inglehart said.
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