A new measure of prosperity

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BUSINESS LEADERS CAN BE A PIONEER IN PURSUING HAPPINESS FOR THE ENTIRE SOCIETY

KENGO SAKURADA
Group CEO Sompo Holdings, Inc.

If you could travel forward to 2030, what theme would you see at Davos? It would be “Rebuilding a Cooperative Society,” “Trust in a Fragmented World,”… Security, climate change, or perhaps frontier technologies. While leaders have discussed these similar agendas and solutions, fostering cooperation has become more difficult. We are living in an era of eroding trust. To overcome fragmentation and to rebuild trust, a fundamental understanding of the modern economy as a driving force in today’s world is essential. Based on that, we need to rethink and share a grand design for solving our challenges and building a prosperous society. The keyword in this endeavor is “happiness.”

What kind of prosperity have we achieved so far? The prevailing definition of prosperity focuses on economic power and growth as measures of success. Whether for a local bakery or a global corporation, advocates of growth believe that it is better to make more sales tomorrow than today. Let’s take a look at history. The Second Industrial Revolution enabled mass production and created an adequate supply of goods. This has dramatically increased the importance of money in its role as “a unit of account,” “a store of value,” and “a medium of exchange.” As a result, we have pursued economic power as the sole indicator of prosperity, such as Gross Domestic Product, and strive for economic growth. Waves of globalization and technological evolution have fostered overall economic growth, but have allowed the few who are strong to achieve greater power while exploiting the many who are weak. Disparities have been exacerbated, and fragmentation has intensified. This sequence of events is described as “economic degeneracy,” citing a concept from quantum physics. Society cannot achieve prosperity solely by pursuing economic power.

The path to a truly prosperous world requires a shift in focus towards optimal happiness for all, in addition to economic power. Defining happiness, however, is a complex task. What makes people happy? The degree to which the same thing creates happiness differs from person to person. Happiness is subjective and multifaceted. This is a world of “multiple values” where each of us determines worth as opposed to “one fixed price” based solely on an economic perspective. In a world of multiple values, the Japanese concept of Seikatsusha gains significance. It views individuals in th

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