
Part of the reason we feel worse with our decisions when we have so many things to choose from is because our expectations of how something should be go up with so many options. Schwartz tells a story of when he went jeans shopping and had to decide between hundreds of different styles, cuts, washes, thicknesses, materials, etc. He ended up picking jeans that were definitely more comfortable than he says jeans used to be without all the choices, but nevertheless, he was less satisfied than he used to be. He said he “did better but felt worse.” I like his explanation for this. He says that because there are so many options, we become responsible for the outcome, not the jean maker or the world around us. When you don’t feel completely satisfied, you think to yourself, “I could have done better.” There is no excuse for failure and we blame ourselves. Schwartz connects this to the boom in clinical depression over the last couple decades. We may be doing better with all these choices, but we feel worse.
Schwartz argues that the more options there are, the easier it is to regret anything at all that is disappointing about the choice you made. From an economist’s perspective, this is like opportunity cost: how much we value things depends on what we compare them to. It’s easy to see attractive features of things we reject and this makes us less satisfied with alternative we choose. At a more general level, a common belief is that income redistribution only benefits the poor. Schwartz continues to argue, however, that reducing choices is a pareto improving move. What enables choice is material affluence. Therefore if choices are reduced, and income is redistributed, everyone will be better off, because as we’ve learned, too much choice can make us feel worse even if we’re doing better.
I find Schwartz’s discussion very pertinent for the consumer. While we may have a taste for variety, it is not necessarily in our best interest to be bombarded with so many choices. Some choice is better than none but we've passed the point where so many options improve our welfare. As Schwartz puts it, “everyone needs a fishbowl.”
1 comment:
Interesting perspective -
I recall an incident in Nepal - the guide (an educated young man) told us that he eats the same thing every day - dal bat. (lentils and beans) - and he said that he really looks forward to eating it. He said that he just doesn't understand the need for food choices!
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