Shibir calls half day hartal in CTG on Thursday   * * *   Parliament passes bill to modernize transport system of Dhaka City   * * *   AL does not believe in `appease India’ policy: PM   * * *   Construction of metro rail in capital to start very soon: PM   * * *   Stocks turn red; SEC to probe ‘unusual trading’   * * *   CU BCL-Shibir clash kills 2 Shibir men, injures 25   * * *   HC issues rule on govt over CMCH staff appointment   * * *   BB sits with MDs of banks Thursday   * * *   Green banking ‘can cope with varying environmental scenarios’   * * *   WB to introduce citizen monitoring in its B’desh projects   * * *   Ain-o-Salish Kendra protests BSF chief’s remark   * * *   Eight Parliamentary Committees reconstituted today   * * *   Quader for political reform to fight corruption   * * *   Work on separate rail bridge beside Bangabandhu Bridge is on: Railway Minister   * * *   President appoints Rakib as new CEC   * * *   Firing won’t stop at border: BSF chief
<   >
Wednesday, 08 February 2012

Report: Money can buy you happiness, to a point

PrintDecrease Font SizeIncrease Font Size
Reported by: AP/UNBconnect
Reported on: September 06, 2010 23:55 PM
Reported in: International

WASHINGTON, Sept 6 (AP/UNB) - They say money can't buy happiness. They're wrong. At least up to a point.

People's emotional well-being - happiness - increases along with their income up to about $75,000, researchers report in Tuesday's edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

For people making less than that, said Angus Deaton, an economist at the Center for Health and Wellbeing at Princeton University, "Stuff is so in your face it's hard to be happy. It interferes with
your enjoyment."

Deaton and Daniel Kahneman reviewed surveys of 450,000 Americans conducted in 2008 and 2009 for the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index that included questions on people's day-to-day happiness and their overall life satisfaction.

Happiness got better as income rose but the effect leveled out at $75,000, Deaton said. On the other hand, their overall sense of success or well-being continued to rise as their earnings grew beyond that point.

"Giving people more income beyond 75K is not going to do much for their daily mood ... but it is going to make them feel they have a better life," Deaton said in an interview.

Not surprisingly, someone who moves from a $100,000-a-year job to one paying $200,000 realizes an improved sense of success. That doesn't necessarily mean they are happier day to day, Deaton said.

The results were similar for other measures, Deaton said. For example, people were really happier on weekends, but their deeper sense of well-being didn't change.

Kahneman, a Nobel Prize winning psychologist, and Deaton undertook the study to learn more about economic growth and policy.

Some have questioned the value of growth to individuals, and Deaton said they were far from definitively resolving that question.

But he added, "Working on this paper has brought me a lot of emotional well-being. As an economist I tend to think money is good for you, and am pleased to find some evidence for that."

Overall, the researchers said, "as in other studies of well-being, we found that most people were quite happy and satisfied with their lives."

Comparing their life-satisfaction results with those of other countries, the researchers said the United States ranked ninth after the Scandinavian countries, Canada, the Netherlands, Switzerland and New Zealand.

The research was supported by the Gallup Organization and the National Institute on Aging.

Bookmark with

Comments

No Comments on this News

Editor's Picks

Banner
Banner
Banner