Exploding
the Self-Esteem Myth
Boosting
people's sense of self-worth has become a national preoccupation. Yet surprisingly, research shows that such efforts are of
little value in fostering academic progress or preventing undesirable behavior
By Roy F.
Baumeister, Jennifer D. Campbell, Joachim I. Krueger and Kathleen D. Vohs
People intuitively
recognize the importance of self-esteem to their psychological health, so it isn't particularly remarkable that most of us
try to protect and enhance it in ourselves whenever possible. What is remarkable is that attention to self-esteem has become
a communal concern, at least for Americans, who see a favorable opinion of oneself as the central psychological source from
which all manner of positive outcomes spring. The corollary, that low self-esteem lies at the root of individual and thus
societal problems and dysfunctions, has sustained an ambitious social agenda for decades. Indeed, campaigns to raise people's
sense of self-worth abound.
Consider what transpired in California
in the late 1980s. Prodded by State Assemblyman John Vasconcellos, Governor George Deukmejian set up a task force on self-esteem
and personal and social responsibility. Vasconcellos argued that raising self-esteem in young people would reduce crime, teen
pregnancy, drug abuse, school underachievement and pollution. At one point, he even expressed the hope that these efforts
would one day help balance the state budget, a prospect predicated on the observation that people with high self-regard earn
more than others and thus pay more in taxes. Along with its other activities, the task force assembled a team of scholars
to survey the relevant literature. The results appeared in a 1989 volume entitled The Social Importance of Self-Esteem, which
stated that "many, if not most, of the major problems plaguing society have roots in the low self-esteem of many of the people
who make up society." In reality, the report contained little to support that assertion.
The California task force disbanded in 1995, but a nonprofit
organization called the National Association for Self-Esteem (NASE) has picked up its mantle, aiming (according to its mission
statement) to "promote awareness of and provide vision, leadership and advocacy for improving the human condition through
the enhancement of self-esteem." Vasconcellos, now a California
state senator, is on the advisory board.
Was it reasonable
for leaders in California to start fashioning therapies
and social policies without supportive data? Perhaps so. After all, practicing psychologists and lawmakers must deal with
the problems facing them, even before all the relevant research is done. But one can draw on many more studies now than was
the case 15 years ago, enough to assess the value of self-esteem in several spheres. Regrettably, those who have been pursuing
self-esteem-boosting programs, including the leaders of NASE, have not shown a desire to examine the new work, which is why
the four of us recently came together under the aegis of the American Psychological Society to review the scientific literature.
In the Eye of the Beholder Gauging the value of self-esteem requires, first of all, a sensible way to measure
it. Most investigators just ask people what they think of themselves. Naturally enough, the answers are often colored by the
common tendency to want to make oneself look good. Unfortunately, psychologists lack any better method to judge self-esteem,
which is worrisome because similar self-ratings of other attributes often prove to be way off. Consider, for instance, research
on the relation between self-esteem and physical attractiveness.
Some findings even suggest that artificially boosting
self-esteem may lower subsequent academic performance.
Several studies have explored correlations between these
qualities, generally finding clear positive links when people rate themselves on both properties. It seems plausible that
physically attractive people would end up with high self-esteem because they are treated more favorably than unattractive
ones--being more popular, more sought after, more valued by lovers and friends, and so forth. But it could just as well be
that those who score highly on self-esteem scales by claiming to be wonderful people all around also boast of being physically
attractive.
Exploding the Self-Esteem Myth
In 1995 Edward F. Diener and Brian Wolsic of the University
of Illinois and Frank Fujita of Indiana University South
Bend examined this possibility. They obtained self-esteem scores from a broad sample of the population and then photographed
everybody, presenting these pictures to a panel of judges, who evaluated the subjects for attractiveness. Ratings based on
full-length photographs showed no significant correlation with self-esteem. Head-and-shoulders close-ups fared slightly better,
but even this finding is dubious, because individuals with high self-esteem might take particular care to present themselves
well, such as by wearing attractive clothing and jewelry. The 1995 study suggests as much: when the judges were shown pictures
of just the participants' unadorned faces, the modest correlation between attractiveness and self-esteem fell to zero. In
that same investigation, however, self-reported physical attractiveness was found to have a strong correlation with self-esteem.
Clearly, those with high self-esteem are gorgeous in their own eyes but not necessarily so to others.
This discrepancy should be sobering. What seemed at first
to be a strong link between physical good looks and high self-esteem turned out to be nothing more than a pattern of consistency
in how favorably people rate themselves. A parallel phenomenon affects those with low self-esteem, who are prone to floccinaucinihilipilification,
a highfalutin word (among the longest in the Oxford English Dictionary) but one that we can't resist using here, it being
defined as "the action or habit of estimating as worthless." That is, people with low self-esteem are not merely down on themselves;
they are negative about everything.
This tendency has certainly distorted some assessments.
For example, psychologists once thought that people with low self-esteem were especially prejudiced. Early studies, in which
subjects simply rated groups to which they did not belong, seemingly confirmed that notion, but thoughtful scholars, such
as Jennifer Crocker of the University of Michigan
at Ann Arbor, questioned this conclusion. After all, if people
rate themselves negatively, it is hardly proper to label them as prejudiced for rating people not like themselves similarly.
When one uses the difference between the subjects' assessments of their own group and their ratings of other groups as the
yardstick for bias, the findings are reversed: people with high self-esteem appear to be more prejudiced. Floccinaucinihilipilification
also raises the danger that those who describe themselves disparagingly may describe their lives similarly, thus furnishing
the appearance that low self-esteem has unpleasant outcomes.
Given the
often misleading nature of self-reports, we set up our review to emphasize objective measures wherever possible--a requirement
that greatly reduced the number of relevant studies (from more than 15,000 to about 200). We were also mindful to avoid another
fallacy: the assumption that a correlation between self-esteem and some desired behavior establishes causality. Indeed, the
question of causality goes to the heart of the debate. If high self-esteem brings about certain positive outcomes, it may
well be worth the effort and expense of trying to instill this feeling. But if the correlations mean simply that a positive
self-image is a result of success or good behavior--which is, after all, at least as plausible--there is little to be gained
by raising self-esteem alone. We began our two-year effort to sort out the issue by reviewing studies relating self-esteem
to academic performance.
School Daze At the outset, we had every reason to hope that boosting self-esteem would be a potent tool for
helping students. Logic suggests that having a good dollop of self- esteem would enhance striving and persistence in school,
while making a student less likely to succumb to paralyzing feelings of incompetence or self-doubt. Early work showed positive
correlations between self-esteem and academic performance, lending credence to this notion. Modern efforts have, however,
cast doubt on the idea that higher self-esteem actually induces students to do better.
Such inferences about causality are possible when the
subjects are examined at two different times, as was the case in 1986 when Sheila M. Pottebaum, Timothy Z. Keith and Stewart
W. Ehly, all then at the University of Iowa,
tested more than 23,000 high school students, first in the 10th and again in the 12th grade. They found that self-esteem in
10th grade is only weakly predictive of academic achievement in 12th grade. Academic achievement in 10th grade correlates
with self-esteem in 12th grade only trivially better. Such results, which are now available from multiple studies, certainly
do not indicate that raising self-esteem offers students much benefit. Some findings even suggest that artificially boosting
self-esteem may lower subsequent performance.
Even if raising self-esteem does not foster academic
progress, might it serve some purpose later, say, on the job? Apparently not. Studies of possible links between workers' self-regard
and job performance echo what has been found with schoolwork: the simple search for correlations yields some suggestive results,
but these do not show whether a good self-image leads to occupational success, or vice versa. In any case, the link is not
particularly strong.
The failure
to contribute significantly at school or at the office would be easily offset if a heightened sense of self-worth helped someone
to get along better with others. Having a good self-image might make someone more likable insofar as people prefer to associate
with confident, positive individuals and generally avoid those who suffer from self-doubts and insecurities.
People who regard themselves highly generally state that
they are popular and rate their friendships as being of superior quality to those described by people with low self-esteem,
who report more negative interactions and less social support. But as Julia Bishop and Heidi M. Inderbitzen-Nolan of the University
of Nebraska–Lincoln showed in 1995, these assertions do not reflect reality. The investigators asked 542 ninth-grade
students to nominate their most-liked and least-liked peers, and the resulting rankings displayed no correlation whatsoever
with self-esteem scores.
A few other
methodologically sound studies have found that the same is true for adults. In one of these investigations, conducted in the
late 1980s, Duane P. Buhrmester, now at the University of Texas at Dallas, and three colleagues reported that college students
with high levels of self-regard claimed to be substantially better at initiating relationships, better at disclosing things
about themselves, better at asserting themselves in response to objectionable behaviors by others, better at providing emotional
support and better even at managing interpersonal conflicts. Their roommates' ratings, however, told a different story. For
four of the five interpersonal skills surveyed, the correlation with self-esteem dropped to near zero. The only one that remained
statistically significant was with the subjects' ability to initiate new social contacts and friendships. This does seem to
be one sphere in which confidence indeed matters: people who think that they are desirable and attractive should be adept
at striking up conversations with strangers, whereas those with low self-esteem presumably shy away from initiating such contacts,
fearing rejection.
One can imagine that such differences might influence
a person's love life, too. In 2002 Sandra L. Murray of the University at Buffalo and four colleagues found that people low
in self-esteem tend to distrust their partners' expressions of love and support, acting as though they are constantly expecting
rejection. Thus far, however, investigators have not produced evidence that such relationships are especially prone to dissolve.
In fact, high self-esteem may be the bigger threat: as Caryl E. Rusbult, Gregory D. Morrow and Dennis J. Johnson, all then
at the University of Kentucky,
showed back in 1987, those who think highly of themselves are more likely than others to respond to problems by severing relations
and seeking other partners.
Sex, Drugs, Rock 'n' Roll
How about teenagers? How does self-esteem or the lack
thereof, influence their love life, in particular their sexual activity? Investigators have examined this subject extensively.
All in all, the results do not support the idea that low self-esteem predisposes young people to more or earlier sexual activity.
If anything, those with high self-esteem are less inhibited, more willing to disregard risks and more prone to engage in sex.
At the same time, bad sexual experiences and unwanted pregnancies appear to lower self-esteem.
If not sex, then how about alcohol or illicit drugs?
Abuse of these substances is one of the most worrisome behaviors among young people, and many psychologists once believed
that boosting self-esteem would prevent such problems. The thought was that people with low self-esteem turn to drinking or
drugs for solace. The data, however, do not consistently show that low adolescent self-esteem causes or even correlates with
the abuse of alcohol or other drugs. In particular, in a large-scale study in 2000, Rob McGee and Sheila M. Williams of the
University of Otago Medical School in New Zealand found no correlation between self-esteem measured between ages nine and
13 and drinking or drug use at age 15. Even when findings do show links between alcohol use and self-esteem, they are mixed
and inconclusive. A few studies have shown that high self-esteem is associated with frequent alcohol consumption, but another
suggests the opposite. We did find, however, some evidence that low self-esteem contributes to illicit drug use. In particular,
Judy A. Andrews and Susan C. Duncan of the Oregon Research Institute found in 1997 that declining levels of academic motivation
(the main focus of their study) caused self-esteem to drop, which in turn led to marijuana use, although the connection was
rather weak.
Another complication
that also clouds these studies is that the category of people with high self-esteem contains individuals whose self-opinions
differ in important ways. Yet in most analyses, people with a healthy sense of self-respect are, for example, lumped with
those feigning higher self-esteem than they really feel or who are narcissistic. Not surprisingly, the results of such investigations
may produce weak or contradictory findings.
Bully for You For decades, psychologists believed that low self-esteem was an important cause of aggression.
One of us (Baumeister) challenged that notion in 1996, when he reviewed assorted studies and concluded that perpetrators of
aggression generally hold favorable and perhaps even inflated views of themselves.
Take the bullying that goes on among children, a common
form of aggression. Dan Olweus of the University of Bergen was one of the first to dispute the notion that under their tough exteriors,
bullies suffer from insecurities and self-doubts. Although Olweus did not measure self-esteem directly, he showed that bullies
reported less anxiety and were more sure of themselves than other children. Apparently the same applies to violent adults,
as Baumeister discussed in these pages a few years ago [see "More to Explore," below].
After coming to the conclusion that high self-esteem
does not lessen a tendency toward violence, that it does not deter adolescents from turning to alcohol, tobacco, drugs and
sex, and that it fails to improve academic or job performance, we got a boost when we looked into how self-esteem relates
to happiness. The consistent finding is that people with high self-esteem are significantly happier than others. They are
also less likely to be depressed.
One especially compelling study was published in 1995,
after Diener and his daughter Marissa, now a psychologist at the University
of Utah, surveyed more than 13,000 college students, and high self-esteem
emerged as the strongest factor in overall life satisfaction. In 2004 Sonja Lyubomirsky, Chris Tkach and M. Robin DiMatteo
of the University of California at Riverside reported data from more than 600 adults ranging in age from
51 to 95. Once again, happiness and self-esteem proved to be closely tied. Before it is safe to conclude that high self-esteem
leads to happiness, however, further research must address the shortcomings of the work that has been done so far.
People
with high self-esteem are significantly happier than others. They are also less likely to be depressed.
First, causation
needs to be established. It seems possible that high self-esteem brings about happiness, but no research has shown this outcome.
The strong correlation between self-esteem and happiness is just that--a correlation. It is plausible that occupational, academic
or interpersonal successes cause both happiness and high self-esteem and that corresponding failures cause both unhappiness
and low self-esteem. It is even possible that happiness, in the sense of a temperament or disposition to feel good, induces
high self-esteem.
Second, it must be recognized that happiness (and its
opposite, depression) has been studied mainly by means of self-report, and the tendency of some people toward negativity may
produce both their low opinions of themselves and unfavorable evaluations of other aspects of life. In other instances, we
were suspicious of self-reports, yet here it is not clear what could replace such assessments. An investigator would indeed
be hard-pressed to demonstrate convincingly that a person was less (or more) happy than he or she supposed. Clearly, objective
measures of happiness and depression are going to be difficult if not impossible to obtain, but that does not mean self-reports
should be accepted uncritically.
What then
should we do? Should parents, teachers and therapists seek to boost self-esteem wherever possible? In the course of our literature
review, we found some indications that self-esteem is a helpful attribute. It improves persistence in the face of failure.
And individuals with high self-esteem sometimes perform better in groups than do those with low self-esteem. Also, a poor
self-image is a risk factor for certain eating disorders, especially bulimia--a connection one of us (Vohs) and her colleagues
documented in 1999. Other effects are harder to demonstrate with objective evidence, although we are inclined to accept the
subjective evidence that self-esteem goes hand in hand with happiness.
So we can certainly understand how an injection of self-esteem
might be valuable to the individual. But imagine if a heightened sense of self-worth prompted some people to demand preferential
treatment or to exploit their fellows. Such tendencies would entail considerable social costs. And we have found little to
indicate that indiscriminately promoting self-esteem in today's children or adults, just for being themselves, offers society
any compensatory benefits beyond the seductive pleasure it brings to those engaged in the exercise.
ROY F. BAUMEISTER, JENNIFER D. CAMPBELL, JOACHIM I. KRUEGER
and KATHLEEN D. VOHS collaborated on a more technical paper on self-esteem published in Psychological Science in the Public
Interest [see "More to Explore"]. Baumeister, formerly a professor of psychology at Case
Western Reserve University, became Eppes
Professor of Psychology at Florida State
University in 2003. Campbell is emeritus
professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia
in Vancouver. Krueger is professor of psychology at Brown University.
Vohs holds the Canada Research Chair in Marketing Science and Consumer Psychology in the Sauder School of Business at the
University of British Columbia.
MORE TO EXPLORE: The Social Importance of Self-esteem. Edited by Andrew M. Mecca, Neil J. Smelser and John Vasconcellos.
University of California
Press, 1989. Violent Pride. Roy F. Baumeister in Scientific American, Vol. 284, No.
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