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Rising income and the subjective well-being of nations

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It is found that changes in household income were associated with concomitant changes in life evaluations, positive feelings, and negative feelings, which suggest that income standards are now largely global, with little effect of national social comparison.
Abstract
We explored whether rising income in nations is associated with increasing subjective well-being (SWB), with several advances over earlier work. Our methods are improved in that across time, the same well-being questions were asked in the same order, and we employed broad and equivalent representative samples over time from a large number of nations. We also assessed psychosocial factors that might mediate the relation of income and SWB. We found that changes in household income were associated with concomitant changes in life evaluations, positive feelings, and negative feelings. The effects of gross domestic product (GDP) change were weaker and significant only for life evaluations, perhaps because GDP was a less certain index of the standard of living of the average household. The association of income and SWB is more likely to occur when the average person's material welfare accompanies rising income, when people become more satisfied with their finances, and when people become more optimistic about their futures. People did not adapt to the income rises during the period of years we studied, in that income rises produced SWB increases that did not return to earlier levels. It appears that previous researchers failed to come to agreement because of the small sample sizes of the nations, the inconsistent methods across years and surveys, and the lack of measures of potential mediating variables. Analyses of income relative to people in one's nation and between-nation slopes together suggest that income standards are now largely global, with little effect of national social comparison. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved)

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

The Influence of Self-Compassion, Religiosity, Support Group, and Income to Subjective Well-Being of Parents Caring Children with Intellectual Disability

Abstract: Subjective well-being (SWB) is an evaluation of a person's cognitive and affective life. Evaluation of one's life in subjective well-being includes a positive emotional reaction to the occurrence in life, as well as the lack of negative emotional charge of cognition ratings on satisfaction and fulfillment in life [13]. This study was conducted to determine the influence of self-compassion, religiosity, support group and income on the subjective well-being of parents of children with ID (intellectual disability). Researcher adapting various instruments such as Diener's SWB instrument [11], [13], Neff's self-compassion instrument [25], and Huber’s religiosity instrument [20]. The research method used a non-probability sampling with accidental sampling technique. Participants in this study amounted to 209 parents. The researcher uses Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) as construct validity test. The results showed that the four dimensions, namely self-compassion, religiosity,support group, and income have a significant effect on subjective well-being of parents who have children with intellectual disability around Jakarta and Tangerang city of Indonesia. The proportion of the overall independent variables towards SWB amounted to 28.8% with four significant variables that self-compassion, religiosity in aspects of religious knowledge, religious Group and household income.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does the follow-your-passions ideology cause greater academic and occupational gender disparities than other cultural ideologies?

TL;DR: This article found that the follow-your-passions ideology perpetuates academic and occupational gender disparities compared to some other cultural ideologies, such as communal ideology and resources ideology, and that gender disparities are explained by women's versus men's greater tendency to draw upon female role-congruent selves when the following ideology is salient compared to when the resources ideology is not salient.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between perceived economic standing and happiness

TL;DR: This article examined the importance of perception in the relationship between income and happiness and found that people's perception of their economic standing is more telling of their happiness than their actual income, and found a stronger association between happiness and negative perception of one's economic standing than happiness and a positive perception.

Is it wrong to assume economic growth promotes well-being in society?

John Norell, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between economic growth and subjective well-being (SWB) in society and found that SWB is positively correlated with per capita GDP level but not with its relative change, an effect that is strengthened when controlling for change in the income distribution.
References
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Book

Hierarchical Linear Models: Applications and Data Analysis Methods

TL;DR: The Logic of Hierarchical Linear Models (LMLM) as discussed by the authors is a general framework for estimating and hypothesis testing for hierarchical linear models, and it has been used in many applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hierarchical Linear Models: Applications and Data Analysis Methods.

TL;DR: This chapter discusses Hierarchical Linear Models in Applications, Applications in Organizational Research, and Applications in the Study of Individual Change Applications in Meta-Analysis and Other Cases Where Level-1 Variances are Known.
Book ChapterDOI

Does Economic Growth Improve the Human Lot? Some Empirical Evidence

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the association of income and happiness and suggest a Duesenberry-type model, involving relative status considerations as an important determinant of happiness.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey Method for Characterizing Daily Life Experience: The Day Reconstruction Method

TL;DR: The DRM's utility is shown by documenting close correspondences between the DRM reports of 909 employed women and established results from experience sampling, and an analysis of the hedonic treadmill shows its potential for well-being research.
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