Read the newspaper article below and then respond to the following questions in the exam booklet...
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Read the newspaper article below and then respond to the following questions in the exam booklet provided: a) Using your own words, state the primary claim that is being made in the article and identify any secondary or related claims. (5 marks) b) Then critically evaluate the evidence provided by the author using the terms and concepts taught in this course. (10 marks) c) Next, describe the author's underlying values and identify any assumptions they may have made. (5 marks) d) Finally, discuss whether you think the author's claims are valid and convincing and use your critical analysis above to defend your response. (+5 marks) Write your answer as a single essay response and provide indicators for the different sections in the column (e.g. a), b), etc.). The approximate mark values for the various sections are indicated but your response will be assessed as a whole. Americans are richer than Canadians and Europeans - so why aren't they happier? The Globe and Mail: November 10, 2023 John Rapley is a political economist at the University of Cambridge and the managing director of Seaford Macro. There are a couple of caveats to the current tale of the buccaneering American economy. The U.S. dollar is inflated, the stock market boom is lopsided and it's too early to say how long the American recovery will last. Nonetheless, the fact is that, for the time being, Americans are richer than they've ever been. As the COVID-19 pandemic has eased, the United States has raced ahead of its Western Deers. Whereas economies in Europe and Canada are still bumping along more or less where they were before pandemic lockdowns, the U.S. has bounced back strongly. The result is that American gross domestic product per capita now stands some 20 to 50 per cent higher than its G7 partners, depending on the country. Add in that Americans pay less in taxes than the rest of us, and they're taking home up to twice as much money as we do. All that money, in turn, has translated into more saving and thus greater wealth. The U.S. stock market has been outperforming its rivals by some distance and, as a result, the average American is now more than a third richer than before the pandemic. Yet for all that, surveys of self-reported happiness reveal them to be less satisfied with life than their peers, including us Canadians. And while surveys of happiness are problematic, the obiective evidence makes it hard to disagree that Americans are not, on average, happier for being richer. On the contrary, what are known as deaths of despair, which include suicides and drug deaths, have become so severe stateside that the country's average life expectancy has begun going backward. This puzzles economists. In the liberal blogosphere commentators are mystified that Americans just don't get how good they have it. Whereas good economic times should translate into a landslide victory for an incumbent President, Joe Biden is instead floundering in the polls. Mainstream economic theory presumes humans to be utility maximizers - or, as a colleague of mine once put it rather crudely, people want more stuff, and the more stuff they have, the happier they are. But while the assumption that more money equals more utility is treated as canonical in mainstream economic theory, there's surprisingly little evidence for the belief. 2 A half-century ago, the economist Richard Easterlin uncovered what came to be known as the Easterlin paradox: the discovery that while a rise in income boosts an individual's happiness, raising the average income of society as a whole doesn't. It would seem that what makes people happier isn't being richer than they were, but being richer than their neighbours. Equally, there's some evidence that what really benefits a society as it gets richer is not that it has more money, but what it does with it. Europeans do have reasons to be unhappy, not least of which is the darkening mood of the continent's politics, with its rising xenophobia and increasingly sharp-edged populism. Still, European societies may record higher levels of contentment than the U.S. because they have more generous welfare provisions and abundant holidays, which reduce the anxiety that so bedevils many Americans. Our understanding of the economics of happiness is still in its infancy. But we do know that some of the most reliable predictors of contentment, such as happy family life, bear at most only a partial relationship to income. And you just have to scan the self-help section of any bookstore to realize that the secret of human well-being remains very much a live topic. Tell that to the average politician, though, whose campaign pitch is almost certain to be headlined by a promise to boost growth. As the American enigma reveals, it's not obvious that growth, or at least growth alone, is what people want at this moment. What they might instead use from their leaders is a bit more imagination. John Rapley is a political economist specialized in global development, the world economy and economic history. Born, raised and educated in Canada, he returned to his parents' old meeting-ground, Oxford, on a post-doctoral fellowship. After launching his academic career there in the Department of International Development, he decided to immerse himself in his subject by moving to the developing world. There, he spent the next two decades working as an academic journalist and ultimately the creator of a think tank (the Caribbean Policy Research Institute). After helping governments navigate the 2008 financial crisis, he returned to Britain, making his home at the University of Cambridge. Teaching in the University's Centre of Development Studies, he resumed the writing life, and now divides his time among Europe, Canada, and South Africa, where he is a senior fellow at the Johannesburg Institute for Advanced Study, along with South Korea, where he is a visiting professor at Yonsei University's Institute for Poverty Alleviation and International Development. He still keeps his hand in journalism and following a long and varied career during which he interviewed everything from prime ministers and billionaires on their private islands to drug-lords and victims of sex slavery, he contributes frequently to the Globe and Mail 3 Read the newspaper article below and then respond to the following questions in the exam booklet provided: a) Using your own words, state the primary claim that is being made in the article and identify any secondary or related claims. (5 marks) b) Then critically evaluate the evidence provided by the author using the terms and concepts taught in this course. (10 marks) c) Next, describe the author's underlying values and identify any assumptions they may have made. (5 marks) d) Finally, discuss whether you think the author's claims are valid and convincing and use your critical analysis above to defend your response. (+5 marks) Write your answer as a single essay response and provide indicators for the different sections in the column (e.g. a), b), etc.). The approximate mark values for the various sections are indicated but your response will be assessed as a whole. Americans are richer than Canadians and Europeans - so why aren't they happier? The Globe and Mail: November 10, 2023 John Rapley is a political economist at the University of Cambridge and the managing director of Seaford Macro. There are a couple of caveats to the current tale of the buccaneering American economy. The U.S. dollar is inflated, the stock market boom is lopsided and it's too early to say how long the American recovery will last. Nonetheless, the fact is that, for the time being, Americans are richer than they've ever been. As the COVID-19 pandemic has eased, the United States has raced ahead of its Western Deers. Whereas economies in Europe and Canada are still bumping along more or less where they were before pandemic lockdowns, the U.S. has bounced back strongly. The result is that American gross domestic product per capita now stands some 20 to 50 per cent higher than its G7 partners, depending on the country. Add in that Americans pay less in taxes than the rest of us, and they're taking home up to twice as much money as we do. All that money, in turn, has translated into more saving and thus greater wealth. The U.S. stock market has been outperforming its rivals by some distance and, as a result, the average American is now more than a third richer than before the pandemic. Yet for all that, surveys of self-reported happiness reveal them to be less satisfied with life than their peers, including us Canadians. And while surveys of happiness are problematic, the obiective evidence makes it hard to disagree that Americans are not, on average, happier for being richer. On the contrary, what are known as deaths of despair, which include suicides and drug deaths, have become so severe stateside that the country's average life expectancy has begun going backward. This puzzles economists. In the liberal blogosphere commentators are mystified that Americans just don't get how good they have it. Whereas good economic times should translate into a landslide victory for an incumbent President, Joe Biden is instead floundering in the polls. Mainstream economic theory presumes humans to be utility maximizers - or, as a colleague of mine once put it rather crudely, people want more stuff, and the more stuff they have, the happier they are. But while the assumption that more money equals more utility is treated as canonical in mainstream economic theory, there's surprisingly little evidence for the belief. 2 A half-century ago, the economist Richard Easterlin uncovered what came to be known as the Easterlin paradox: the discovery that while a rise in income boosts an individual's happiness, raising the average income of society as a whole doesn't. It would seem that what makes people happier isn't being richer than they were, but being richer than their neighbours. Equally, there's some evidence that what really benefits a society as it gets richer is not that it has more money, but what it does with it. Europeans do have reasons to be unhappy, not least of which is the darkening mood of the continent's politics, with its rising xenophobia and increasingly sharp-edged populism. Still, European societies may record higher levels of contentment than the U.S. because they have more generous welfare provisions and abundant holidays, which reduce the anxiety that so bedevils many Americans. Our understanding of the economics of happiness is still in its infancy. But we do know that some of the most reliable predictors of contentment, such as happy family life, bear at most only a partial relationship to income. And you just have to scan the self-help section of any bookstore to realize that the secret of human well-being remains very much a live topic. Tell that to the average politician, though, whose campaign pitch is almost certain to be headlined by a promise to boost growth. As the American enigma reveals, it's not obvious that growth, or at least growth alone, is what people want at this moment. What they might instead use from their leaders is a bit more imagination. John Rapley is a political economist specialized in global development, the world economy and economic history. Born, raised and educated in Canada, he returned to his parents' old meeting-ground, Oxford, on a post-doctoral fellowship. After launching his academic career there in the Department of International Development, he decided to immerse himself in his subject by moving to the developing world. There, he spent the next two decades working as an academic journalist and ultimately the creator of a think tank (the Caribbean Policy Research Institute). After helping governments navigate the 2008 financial crisis, he returned to Britain, making his home at the University of Cambridge. Teaching in the University's Centre of Development Studies, he resumed the writing life, and now divides his time among Europe, Canada, and South Africa, where he is a senior fellow at the Johannesburg Institute for Advanced Study, along with South Korea, where he is a visiting professor at Yonsei University's Institute for Poverty Alleviation and International Development. He still keeps his hand in journalism and following a long and varied career during which he interviewed everything from prime ministers and billionaires on their private islands to drug-lords and victims of sex slavery, he contributes frequently to the Globe and Mail 3
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Statistics Informed Decisions Using Data
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Authors: Michael Sullivan III
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