{"id":3617,"date":"1948-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1948-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T14:54:02","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T14:54:02","slug":"april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1948 &#8211; Vol. 29, No. 4 &#8211; The Wants of Mankind"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">&#8220;What do we want?&#8221; is the great question                     of life.<\/p>\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> The answer determines our career, colours                     our daily feeling, and leads us to view everyone and everything                     in the light of the effect they will have on this want of                     ours. It affects the development of our community and the                     nation and has its effect upon the economics of the world.<\/p>\n<p>Many wants are common to all people: food, shelter and clothing,                     for example. One can easily conjure up a picture of millions                     of women standing at kitchen sinks all around the earth in                     time with the sun, peeling potatoes to satisfy their families&#8217;                     need for food; and of men building houses, and of looms turning                     out millions of yards of fabrics for clothing. But there are                     thousands of individual wants, in trying to satisfy which                     we escape the dissatisfaction of boredom.<\/p>\n<p>In every country there have been some followers of the Buddhist                     doctrine that a placid serenity is the highest ideal of life,                     rooting out of existence as many wants and desires as it is                     possible to get rid of. They glory in subsisting on a handful                     of lentils, with no more clothing than a loin cloth, and only                     a woven weed hut for shelter. Cultured civilization has not                     been advanced by such people. We have a future only insofar                     as we have desires, for it is desire that stimulates our initiative                     and makes us reach out our hands to better things in a spirit                     of enterprise.<\/p>\n<h3>Wants and Needs<\/h3>\n<p>Our wants and needs are usually very different things. We                     really cannot say that our necessities for living extend beyond                     three nourishing meals a day, suitable clothing for the protection                     of our bodies against the weather, a comfortable room, and                     a place to sleep. But our desires are unlimited. Besides physical                     things, they include mental or physical activity, mastery                     over some technique or situation, association with other persons                     in a satisfactory community, and a feeling that one is a person                     of some consequence to others. From the economic point of                     view, anything is a necessary of life if the lack of it in                     any way impairs a man&#8217;s efficiency or productive power; a                     desire or want is anything which makes a man willing to exchange                     some of his own labour for it.<\/p>\n<p>No person of even reasonably high IQ can live without desires.                     A Greek philosopher who studied and wrote about these things                     more than 2,000 years ago, and who cannot be called old-fashioned                     since he believed in the atomic theory so recently confirmed                     and developed by scientific discovery, had this to say: there                     are three kinds of desires, those natural and necessary, those                     natural but not necessary, and those which are neither natural                     nor necessary.<\/p>\n<p>Human experience started and developed from desires for                     better things, and today our wants are limitless. The more                     we have, the more widely our vision expands of what we would                     like to have. Every man has had this experience in himself.                     At 16 he thinks that if only he had $35 a week the world would                     be at his feet. At 25, earning $45 a week, he desires a car,                     a better radio, and a home of his own. Every successive increment                     opens new vistas, and every accomplishment means new desires.<\/p>\n<p>Much of man&#8217;s satisfaction comes out of achieving distinction.                     Men work not that they may barely live, but in order that                     they may get the most out of life. What this &#8220;most&#8221; is will                     vary from person to person. Some great things have been done                     by people who seemed to be gratifying merely frivolous desires.                     The men who discovered America were not seeking to lay the                     foundations of the world&#8217;s greatest industrial commonwealths,                     but merely looking for spices. The men who opened up Canada                     were not earnest business men or statesmen: they were Gentlemen                     Adventurers.<\/p>\n<p>There is a psychological hunger for goods that is just as                     real as the physical hunger, and this is the villain which                     gets people into financial trouble. Many of us &#8211; most of us                     &#8211; are just as foolish in this way as Wilkins Micawber. Dickens                     tells us in <em>David Copperfield <\/em>how Mr. Micawber often                     found himself in the debtors&#8217; prison. On one occasion when                     David went to visit him there, Micawber proclaimed his now                     famous principle about happiness falling upon the man who                     spent only 19 pounds, 19 shillings and six pence of his 20                     pounds income, while misery followed if he spent twenty pounds                     and one shilling. <em>Then Micawber borrowed a shilling from                     David to buy porter<\/em>.<\/p>\n<h3>Satisfactions<\/h3>\n<p>Every man must work out for himself the nature of the wants                     whose satisfaction will give him the greatest pleasure, and                     whether he should wait for better things or take what are                     available. There is no way of measuring the intensity of feeling                     of two persons, and so we cannot judge which of two things                     equally available to them will give the greater satisfaction.                     The value of an article depends upon its utility to a particular                     person at a particular time and in particular circumstances.                     A man will gladly pay a dollar for a service in a crisis whereas                     he would hesitate to pay half of that in normal times. He                     does so because he believes the service is worth a dollar                     to him at that time.<\/p>\n<p>If the choice lies between different articles, he will take                     the article which promises to give him most satisfaction.                     One man will spend his dollar for several cigars, which he                     may smoke in two days, while another will buy a half pound                     of pipe tobacco which will last him two weeks. The latter                     will think of the first as having a very extravagant taste,                     while the former will think of the pipe smoker as having a                     very low taste sense. The habit of going through life with                     the idea that everyone who doesn&#8217;t share your particular pleasures                     is just a little queer has caused a lot of illogical trouble.                     There is more enjoyment for some people in climbing a mountain                     to contemplate a wonderful view than in sitting down to a                     rich and full meal. Each is right for himself and need not                     smile superciliously at the other.<\/p>\n<h3>Increasing Wants<\/h3>\n<p>In a broad sense, man&#8217;s needs gave rise to his activities                     in the early stages of his development, but at a later stage                     every new step upward gave rise to new desires. At first the                     needs dictated the advancement: latterly the advancement created                     the wants. All the way up from his cave to the elegant apartment,                     man has been developing new wants.<\/p>\n<p>Anyone wishing to know the extent to which wants have increased                     need only look at the difference between 20 or 40 years ago                     and today. We are consuming very different quantities of the                     same goods, but in addition we have many new goods to consume.                     People now want, and demand, and can pay for, things which                     were unattainable or not even thought of by their parents                     or their grandparents.<\/p>\n<p>Possession of these new things is far from killing desire.                     In fact, every new possession appears only to stimulate desire.                     All the world looks up to the United States as a country where                     people have satisfied more human desires than anywhere else.                     Yet the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Georgia, finds occasion                     to say in its January <em>Review<\/em>: &#8220;Throughout the United                     States (in 1947) most consumers seemed intent on showing that                     if they had the purchasing power to satisfy their unlimited                     wants they would spend it all on goods and services. They                     saved less of their current incomes, they dipped into their                     past savings, and they went into debt. They even paid higher                     and higher prices, though reluctantly, rather than forego                     the pleasure of satisfying their wants as much as they possibly                     could.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In Canada, the total personal expenditure on consumer goods                     and services amounted to $3,714 million in 1938 and $5,926                     million in 1946, in dollars of the same buying power, an increase                     of 60 per cent &#8221; compared with a population increase of 10                     per cent.<\/p>\n<p>As rapidly as supply has grown under the wheels of machines,                     demand has kept ahead of it. Today, the providing of things                     people want is far behind demand. With their tables laden                     with good things which would have seemed the undreamable heights                     of luxury to aristocrats of a century ago, today&#8217;s ordinary                     people are crying in front of Mother Hubbard&#8217;s cupboard for                     something more. Amid riches, we bewail what we lack.<\/p>\n<h3>Standards of Living<\/h3>\n<p>Much of our striving is connected with something we call                     our &#8220;standard of living.&#8221; Standards differ between groups                     in a country, and between countries. They have changed, too,                     over periods of not so many years.<\/p>\n<p>Some countries, limited as to natural resources, may have                     to be content with supplying the minimum needs of their people,                     but a new and rich country like Canada can go far beyond that,                     as indeed she has. Without saying that the standard is yet                     as high as it can be, it is a good thing, every once in a                     while, to look around the world and give thanks for what we                     have.<\/p>\n<p>One of the results of a high general standard is that differences                     within the country are less noticeable. Stephen Leacock said                     in one of his essays: &#8220;As the land rises the mountains lose                     their apparent height, and no new eminence seems to be equal                     to the old.&#8221; Those on the lowest present-day level of                     living are higher than those who lived on the mountain-top                     standards of a few years ago.<\/p>\n<p>What is a standard of living? It might be called the sum                     of the satisfactions arising from the use of goods and services.                     So many persons run away with the idea that a standard of                     living is set by possession of things. To have a car, or an                     electric refrigerator, or a television set, or a mink coat                     &#8211; these seem to typify certain &#8220;standards.&#8221; Just as soon as                     the idea of satisfaction is abandoned in favour of mere ownership,                     all true standards are lost.<\/p>\n<p>Some people talk about &#8220;standard of living&#8221; when they mean                     &#8220;pattern of living.&#8221; Every increase in income urges them to                     some new pattern, and every new pattern raises new wants and                     desires. They may, or may not, have any relation to the necessities                     of life. When a man says &#8220;I want a chance to live&#8221; he means                     far more than mere survival. He wants to associate on terms                     of equality with other persons having the same interests.                     The feeling of &#8220;belonging&#8221; is important as a want. Men strive                     after recognition of their dignity as human beings having                     certain attainments.<\/p>\n<p>Social pressure has almost as much effect upon stimulating                     wants as has the grim vision of the wolf at the door. Under                     its urge, people try to consume a greater quantity and a greater                     variety of goods than do their neighbours, keeping up with                     or ahead of the Jones&#8217;s. The perfectly good car of two years                     ago is turned in on a new model with more chromium trimmings;                     the old-fashioned wide gold band which served well as                     a wedding ring is put into a safe deposit box while the ring                     finger is decorated with a new circlet; women&#8217;s fashions change                     suddenly and extravagantly. A New Look, though it may seem                     to the detached observer like a throwback to something primeval,                     will be adopted by the socially-conscious person at whatever                     price in money and ridicule.<\/p>\n<h3>On Keeping your Balance<\/h3>\n<p>If the object of living is to get the greatest amount of                     satisfaction out of life, then expenditures for food and shelter                     must be carefully balanced with what is spent on clothing,                     recreation, amusement, education and cultural development.                     Otherwise a man may find himself spending a large amount of                     his income on commodities that give temporary pleasure at                     the expense of something which, in the long run, would give                     him greater satisfactions. When a person exchanges his money                     for goods, he is bartering something precious &#8211; the only real                     possession he has the product of a part of his life. He must                     be absurdly stupid if he does not try to get the best return                     possible.<\/p>\n<p>This calls for a new technology, the technology of buying.                     Intelligence may be applied to buying as well as to producing                     and selling. In olden times, when a man produced what he and                     his family consumed, there was little chance of producing                     or consuming unwisely. There was scant opportunity for thinking                     up frivolous wants, or for making foolish choices. The urge                     for basic needs pressed too hard. But life has become complex,                     and wants are more varied, while the range from which to choose                     for the satisfaction of wants is overwhelming.<\/p>\n<p>Families complicate choices. As the family increases in                     size, consumption patterns change, and the children come in                     contact with wants unknown to their parents. The rapid urbanization                     of our age, going hand in hand with industrialization, varies                     the old pattern, and the conflicting ideas about wants and                     the order in which they should be satisfied tend to make family                     life more trying than it used to be when the main idea was                     to produce enough to stay alive.<\/p>\n<p>Look for a moment at the two extremes of age in the family:                     childhood and old age. The child is preparing for emancipation                     from his parents, but in the process his principal demand                     is for love as well as care. Some of today&#8217;s specialized ideas                     about bringing up children are likely to leave out this vital                     fact. Just recently, after a decade of lapse during which                     certain child experts taught mothers to &#8220;let the baby cry                     itself out&#8221;, we are getting back to the common sense idea                     that what the baby wants most is the feeling of love and security                     it finds only in its mother&#8217;s arms.<\/p>\n<p>Old age is the last of a series of adaptive changes in life.                     It is marked by diminishing powers and a narrowing world.                     Its greatest need is the capacity to accept change without                     anxiety and resistance. Its greatest good can be a beneficient                     twilight period, reflective and peaceful, of the kind mentioned                     by Cicero in his essay <em>On Old Age<\/em>: &#8220;The proper fruit                     to be gathered in the winter of our days is to be able to                     look back with self-approving satisfaction on the happy                     and abundant produce of more active years.&#8221; The truth of the                     comparative wantlessness of old age was never more strikingly                     seen than in the case of John Hilton, 73-year-old                     Lancashire retired factory worker, reported in our daily papers                     last October. Living on a pension of $17.40 a week, he was                     told that he had inherited $1,080,000. &#8220;Thirty years ago it                     might have meant so much,&#8221; he said, &#8220;but now all it has done                     is make me ill and worried.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Wants are modified, too, by abilities. People with musical                     talent are more likely to spend money for musical training                     and concerts than are those who lack such ability. On the                     other hand, the woman who has skill in making over dresses                     may reduce the family expenditure on clothing.<\/p>\n<p>Education modifies not only the wants of those seeking it,                     but the wants of those who make education possible. Parents                     divert resources they could well use for their own comfort                     and enjoyment, so that their children shall have a better                     chance in life than they had.<\/p>\n<p>There is a growing demand for the beautiful things of life,                     for books, painting, music and drama. With the necesssities                     well taken care of, people turn to intangible things which                     satisfy the mind and spirit.<\/p>\n<p>This last half century has seen an increase in real wages                     and a decrease in hours of work, two factors which enable                     our people to indulge more than ever before in satisfaction                     of their desire to take part in activities outside the workshop.<\/p>\n<h3>Economic Demand<\/h3>\n<p>We have written about &#8220;wants&#8221; and &#8220;demand&#8221; as if they were                     things in themselves, but they are not effective, however                     strong they may be, unless they are accompanied by the means                     to obtain their satisfaction. No matter how much a man may                     desire a car, for example, his wishes can have no effect unless                     he has the necessary means of payment. Desire must be accompanied                     by purchasing power before it can become effective economic                     demand.<\/p>\n<p>Articles which are not freely available, for the production                     of which a certain amount of labour is needed, possess value,                     and the equivalent of this value must be laid on the counter                     by the person who desires the articles.<\/p>\n<p>If a man expects to want some things in future more than                     he wants things which are available at the moment, he saves                     his money, turning it into a store of value representing work                     he has done. Canadians have a great deal of effective demand                     stored up in savings. There were, at September 30th last,                     6,337,500 savings accounts in the chartered banks, totalling                     $3,805,900,000. This represents $302 for every person in Canada,                     compared with $130 per person 25 years ago. When translated                     into dollars of the same value, the increase is 192 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>Department stores sales in 1947 totalled $547,750,000, an                     increase of $257,800,000 over 1939. In 1947 Canadians spent                     a great deal more than ever before in history, reaching a                     total of $8,700 million, which is nearly a billion dollars                     higher than in the previous year. Between those two years,                     labour income increased 12.2 per cent, agricultural and other                     unincorporated business net income increased 13.2 per cent                     and investment income increased 8.3 per cent. The money available                     for buying increased from $230 per person in 1939 to $528                     in 1946 and $566 at the end of 1947.<\/p>\n<p>Prices of goods vary with the effective demand. If a lot                     of people have surplus money, and the goods they want are                     scarce, the price will go up. The price variation, in turn,                     affects the degree to which persons may supply their wants.                     Inflation, such as we have now, is the result of having too                     few commodities relative to the amount of money available.                     As a result, individuals and businesses are learning all over                     again how to buy in the best way to get satisfaction of their                     most important wants.<\/p>\n<p>It must be kept in mind by the, consumer that when his living                     costs are up, so are the living or operating expenses of business.                     They are measured in the same kind of dollars, which buy as                     little of what business men want today as they do of what                     individual consumers want. An example is at hand in an address                     made by the General Manager of this Bank to the Credit Men&#8217;s                     Trust Association in Toronto a couple of months ago, when                     he pointed out that if you add together taxes, interest to                     depositors, and salaries paid to staff you will find that                     in these three items alone the banks paid out in 1946 an average                     of $9.90 for every dollar received by shareholders in dividends.<\/p>\n<h3>Industry Supplies Wants<\/h3>\n<p>We do not live on the goods we produce with our own hands.                     Those who are inclined to point to Robinson Crusoe on his                     island as an example of self-sufficiency must recall                     that he started off with a fair stock of things made by others.                     In the modern world, everyone must produce his own specialty                     and live by its exchange for the products of other specialists.<\/p>\n<p>What we need in order to provide as much return as possible                     for every man&#8217;s work is what we might call an overflowing                     storehouse of goods we can use. But this storehouse can be                     filled only if men and women turn out the maximum quantity                     of goods per hour of employment. It makes sense that out of                     a full storehouse there will be more to supply the wants of                     every person in Canada than out of a half-filled one.                     The level of living to which Canadians aspire or have attained                     cannot be kept up on a pre-war scale of production or                     employment. We need more production per worker, more international                     trade, and a higher national income.<\/p>\n<p>So, if we wish to satisfy our wants we must work. Without                     work, nothing of value, either in the way of commodities or                     spiritual satisfaction, is given mankind. People don t particularly                     like gifts; it is more pleasant to receive something because                     you have worked for it and earned it.<\/p>\n<p>It is not a crime to be selfish in this regard, to work                     for things because we want them rather than because they benefit                     others. A long time ago Plato devised a communistic state,                     one of the &#8220;Ideal Commonwealths&#8221; we read about. The realistic                     Aristotle opposed it on the grounds that self-interest                     was more dependable than interest in the common good as an                     incentive to industry. He was sure that a man would work more                     diligently to care for his own family than he would for persons                     whom he did not know.<\/p>\n<p>Work in exchange for what we want is an unescapable reality,                     and it is the better part of wisdom to realize that the more                     productive our work the better chance there is of our drawing                     down a good share from the common product to satisfy our wants.<\/p>\n<h3>Looking Ahead<\/h3>\n<p>In our society, millions of people are producing things                     for us to use, a vast production made possible by highly efficient                     working methods and the use of powerful machines. Development                     to this stage of efficiency was made in a comparatively short                     time, when &#8220;time&#8221; is judged by the age of men on the earth.                     A person transported from a city of 2000 B.C. to London of                     1700 A.D. would have found people living very much as he himself                     was used to living; but a person transplanted from the London                     of 1700 to Montreal, Toronto or Vancouver of today would think                     people are living luxuriously with the aid of many fantastic                     machines.<\/p>\n<p>Amid all the new devices for supplying things men want,                     there is one need which is not receiving the attention it                     deserves. The thousandfold complication of human relationships                     brought about by the new ways of living has not been met.                     Society has not spanned the distance between social needs                     and social science, in the same way that the gap between physical                     wants and the physical sciences has been bridged.<\/p>\n<p>We need to look ahead. To supply future wants requires thinking                     today. To preserve ourselves, society and the human race,                     we need to apply all our available energy to useful purposes,                     and give thought to the social implications of the things                     we do.<\/p>\n<p>Instead, our demand, while nominally concerned with supplying                     wants with great richness, side-slips with many of us                     into a job-lot of substitutes. We are so sorely beset                     within and without by conflicting ideas that our sober judgment                     as to values is upset. In China, taxi drivers riot in protest                     at closing of night clubs, while all around them freedom is                     tottering on the edge of a complete shutdown; in the United                     States certain militant women are crusading for better soap                     operas, while in Europe a nation falls unfought for into the                     hands of a despot.<\/p>\n<p>No true values are lost by looking our wants squarely in                     the face and appraising the price we should pay for them.                     Common sense is as useful to the average man in this judgment                     as would be the most subtle reasoning of economists. Right                     selection of the wants which we shall satisfy should help                     us to make for ourselves a good world, or as Leacock said                     in another connection &#8220;reconcile us at least to one that might                     have been worse.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[28],"class_list":["post-3617","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-28"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1948 - Vol. 29, No. 4 - The Wants of Mankind - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1948 - Vol. 29, No. 4 - The Wants of Mankind - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"&#8220;What do we want?&#8221; is the great question of life. 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The answer determines our career, colours our daily feeling, and leads us to view everyone and everything in the light of the effect they will have on this want of ours. It affects the development of our community and the nation and has its effect [&hellip;]","og_url":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind\/","og_site_name":"RBC","article_modified_time":"2022-11-28T14:54:02+00:00","twitter_card":"summary_large_image","twitter_misc":{"Est. reading time":"18 minutes"},"schema":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind\/","url":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind\/","name":"April 1948 - Vol. 29, No. 4 - The Wants of Mankind - RBC","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/#website"},"datePublished":"1948-04-01T01:00:00+00:00","dateModified":"2022-11-28T14:54:02+00:00","inLanguage":"en-US","potentialAction":[{"@type":"ReadAction","target":["https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind\/"]}]},{"@type":"WebSite","@id":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/#website","url":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/","name":"RBC","description":"","potentialAction":[{"@type":"SearchAction","target":{"@type":"EntryPoint","urlTemplate":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/?s={search_term_string}"},"query-input":{"@type":"PropertyValueSpecification","valueRequired":true,"valueName":"search_term_string"}}],"inLanguage":"en-US"}]}},"parsely":{"version":"1.1.0","canonical_url":"https:\/\/rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1948-vol-29-no-4-the-wants-of-mankind\/","smart_links":{"inbound":0,"outbound":0},"traffic_boost_suggestions_count":0,"meta":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@type":"NewsArticle","headline":"April 1948 &#8211; 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