Abstract

The Heritage Foundation and the Fraser Institute measure economic freedom in nations using indices with ten and five indicators respectively. Eight of the Heritage indicators and four of the Fraser-indicators are about specific types of institutional quality, like rule of law, the protection of property, and the provision of sound money. More of these is considered to denote more economic freedom. Both indices also involve indicators of ‘big government’, or levels of government activities. More of that is seen to denote less economic freedom. Yet, levels of government spending, consumption, and transfers and subsidies appear to correlate positively with the other indicators related to institutional quality, while this correlation is close to zero for the level of taxation as a percentage of GDP. Using government spending, consumption transfers and subsidies as positive indicators is no alternative, because these levels stand for very different government activities, liberal or less liberal. This means that levels of government activities can better be left out as negative or positive indicators. Thus shortened variants of the indices create a better convergent validity in the measurement of economic freedom, and create higher correlations between economic freedom and alternative types of freedom, and between economic freedom and happiness. The higher correlations indicate a better predictive validity, since they are predictable in view of the findings of previous research and theoretical considerations about the relations between types of freedom, and between freedom and happiness.

Highlights

  • The role of governments, in relation to security and freedom, has been a subject of vivid discussions since Thomas Hobbes published his ‘Leviathan’ in 1651

  • Positive freedom refers to the actual availability of options; negative freedom refers to the absence of restrictions or interference by others

  • The focus of Veenhoven is on negative freedom in nations by the absence of formal or informal restrictions

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Summary

Introduction

The role of governments, in relation to security and freedom, has been a subject of vivid discussions since Thomas Hobbes published his ‘Leviathan’ in 1651. Utilitarians like Jeremy Bentham, James Mill and John Stuart Mill added happiness as an additional value to be considered. In any scientific way, what priorities security, freedom, and happiness deserve as values, but we can try to get a better understanding of their mutual relations as actual phenomena

Previous Research by Veenhoven
Research Questions
Using Convergent Validity to Evaluate Measurements
Conclusions
Discussion: the Importance of the Quality of Governments
Findings
Open markets
Full Text
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