Life Quality as the Concept to Resolve / Transcend the Development Paradox

  • Đenđi Major Fakultet za sport i turizam, Novi Sad

Abstract


The central topic of this study is life quality, which has become an ever touchier problem of social and economic policies in recent years. On the intellectual horizon of public policy, the emphasis has been shifting from the single and ruling aspect of economic growth towards life quality as a key priority – though the manifestation of this theory in practical measures is badly wanting and rare even in developed countries. Even in environments where the shifting of the focus of pubic policy towards life quality is being urged, they are at a loss trying to define the actual meaning of this term (i.e. life quality) and even more so about the means of measuring it.

This study argues that applying the context of life quality offers a chance to resolve the development paradox. Overemphasising the importance of economic growth puts an emphasis on the feeling of comfort, which lowers the chance for happiness: psychological research has proven that the source of happiness is returning from a different-from-optimal level of activity to the accustomed level.

As for the theoretical part, the starting point for the interpretation of the notion of life quality is the redefinition of the notion of happiness. This redefinition is necessitated by the need to transcend the above-mentioned paradox of modernity. In essence, this paradox is nothing else than the fact that, in the consumer society, ideal consumers are not independent and mature personalities but mechanical objects that are deprived of their real human relations, are lonely in and of their fears and are exposed to the manipulation of the mass media.

Keywords: Life quality, Welfare, Personality, Development, Index

Published
2014/03/31
Section
Original Scientific Paper