Does easter contribute to economic growth?
As any Christian will tell you, Jesus was crucified on Good Friday and the
faithful celebrate his resurrection on Easter Sunday.
Sure, the spike in church attendance on Easter Sunday results, in part, from
the special pleasure people derive from marking Easter in church. But the
supply-side product enhancements many churches offer in holy week – special
choral and flower arrangements and the increased networking opportunities
that come with a full house – also help to tilt the cost-benefit balance
towards Easter Sunday attendance.
As a result, religious observance falls below average in the weeks following
Easter as the semi-regular worshippers who shifted their attendance to holy
week drop away. If sunny weather increases the value of a walk in the park
or other competing products on a Sunday, attendance falls even further.
For economists, going to church is just another aspect of rational choice
that is ripe for examination.
Laurence Iannaccone of George Mason University, author of a comprehensive
survey of the economics of religion, has his tongue nowhere near his cheek
as he cites the premise that “individuals allocate their time and goods
among religious and secular commodities so as to maximise lifetime and
afterlife utility.”
His musings on the delicate balance between the spiritual and the material
represent just the tip of the iceberg. While by no means a mainstream branch
of economics, proponents of the dismal science have examined the
relationship between the individual and his religion, or lack of it, in
exhaustive detail.
No question has gone unasked – or unanswered. Why are people religious? What
determines their choice of religion? Why do fanatical sects develop? And
what is the effect of church attendance?
Of course, economics does not help in determining whether religious belief
is well founded but it can explain the links between society and prosperity
on the one hand, and religion on the other. The results are often
surprising.
The question of whether religion improves economic performance was first
examined by Adam Smith as far back as the 18th century. He saw religion as
providing a constraint to enforce individual morality. Last century, the
German sociologist Max Weber argued that the Protestant reformation fostered
the work ethic and thereby ensured the triumph of western European and
American capitalism in the 19th century. And in the past decade, it has
become fashionable to blame Islamic teaching for the lack of modernity and
economic progress in predominantly Muslim countries.
It is all very well to sit around and argue the history, economists say, but
econometric techniques and the data exist to reach a verdict on these
competing theories.
The thrust of the findings is that it is very hard to discern a link between
religion and a country’s economic performance, once the starting position of
an economy, education levels and other important factors have been taken
into account. “Backwardness” among Muslim nations, in particular, is a myth.
Marcus Noland, a senior fellow of the Institute for International Economics,
found that if you looked at the proportion of a population that was Muslim,
either across countries or within countries with large regionally
concentrated Muslim populations, it was almost impossible to find a
statistically significant negative effect of Islam on economic growth. “If
anything, Islam promotes growth,” Mr Noland concluded.
A country’s religion, therefore, is not an important determinant of its
prosperity. Famous economists, however, have lighted on some factors that do
seem to make a difference. Robert Barro and Rachel McCleary of Harvard
University found, not surprisingly, that countries with high church
attendance had high levels of belief in God and hell.
But where two countries had similar levels of church attendance, economic
performance was superior in the one where belief in hell was stronger. In
the same vein, countries with high church attendance had a worse economic
performance than less observant countries with similar levels of belief in
God or hell. Belief matters more than belonging, they concluded. The threat
of hell stops people cheating and increases trust, a valuable public good.
But actually attending church wastes time that could be spent engaging in
more profitable activities.
Academics have not restricted themselves to studying the causal relationship
between religion and economic performance. Many studies have set out to
determine whether richer societies need less religion. The US is a big
outlier. While religious observance tends to fall in most countries as
prosperity increases, the US has seen no reduction in church attendance or
the proportion of clergy in society. Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations
(1776) predicted that the vibrancy of the church in a society such as the US
was inevitable. Competition among different churches would keep the clergy
on their toes in a country without a single official religion.
State-sponsored churches, the norm in many European countries, like any
other monopolist, would get lazy, he argued.
“The teachers of [religion] in the same manner as other teachers, may either
depend altogether for their subsistence upon the voluntary contributions of
their hearers; or they may derive it from some other fund to which the law
of their country may entitle them. Their exertion, their zeal, and industry,
are likely to be much greater in the former situation than in the latter.”
But it is in their study of individual choice and its relation to religion
that economists are surest of their ground. Church attendance, it turns out,
is associated with good outcomes such as less criminality, higher incomes
and lower divorce rates (so long as you marry someone from the same
denomination). Nor does a self-selection effect account for the benefits
derived from religious observance: in other words it does not seem to be
simply that good people go to church.
The theory of clubs neatly explains the emergence of weird sects. Extreme
self-sacrifice, whether expressed through an onerous tithe or a drastic
change in lifestyle, shows a credible pre-commitment to a club and helps to
screen out potential freeloaders.
Economics, therefore, dictates that before you unquestioningly attend or
avoid church this Sunday, you should think about your motives. How will your
actions maximise your utility – and, as you make that judgment, just how far
into eternity should you be looking?
Pa Che!
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