نتایج جستجو برای: i31

تعداد نتایج: 290  

2007
Cahit Guven Bent E. Sørensen

Using data from the U.S. General Social Survey, we study the role of income and status in self-reported happiness. Unexpected income gains increase happiness and relative income is more important than absolute income, in particular, income relative to individuals’ own cohort working in the same occupation in the same region. Perceptions about relative income are more important than actual relat...

2000
YANNIS GEORGELLIS

Lags and Leads in Life Satisfaction: A Test of the Baseline Hypothesis We look for evidence of habituation in twenty waves of German panel data: do individuals, after life and labour market events, tend to return to some baseline level of wellbeing? Although the strongest life satisfaction effect is often at the time of the event, we find significant lag and lead effects. We conclude that there...

2011
Pranab Kumar Das Saibal Kar Madhumanti Kayal

Religious Minorities and Provision of Public Goods: Evidence from Rural West Bengal Religious and ethnic minorities across the world face partisan treatment with regard to provision of public goods, either as outcome of discriminatory practices or due to historical antecedents, such as the caste and religious divides in India. In several districts of West Bengal in India concentration of religi...

2009
Alpaslan Akay Peter Martinsson Alois Stutzer Armin Falk

Sundays Are Blue: Aren’t They? The Day-of-the-Week Effect on Subjective Well-Being and Socio-Economic Status This paper analyses whether individuals are influenced by the day of the week when reporting subjective well-being. By using a large panel data set and controlling for observed and unobserved individual characteristics, we find a large day-of the-week effect. Overall, we find a ‘blue’ Su...

2007
Wang-Sheng Lee Umut Oguzoglu

Are Youths on Income Support Less Happy? Evidence from Australia The central research question addressed in this paper is how receipt of income support payments affects the well-being of youths. Using 1997-2004 panel data from a nationally representative survey of Australian youths, we attempt to estimate the size of the welfare stigma faced by Australian youths, where stigma is defined as the ...

2008
Paul Dolan Tessa Peasgood Mathew White

There is increasing interest in the ‘‘economics of happiness’’, reflected by the number of articles that are appearing in mainstream economics journals that consider subjective well-being (SWB) and its determinants. This paper provides a detailed review of this literature. It focuses on papers that have been published in economics journals since 1990, as well as some key reviews in psychology a...

2000
Duncan Watson

Economists tend to adopt an empiricist approach to poverty, commonly calculating it as the proportion of the population that fall below some speci®ed income threshold. This approach has been developed to take into account heterogeneous household needs by using income equivalence scales, but most other individual characteristics are totally ignored. This paper questions the relevance of this app...

2005
Robert Breunig Deborah A. Cobb-Clark Xiaodong Gong Daniella Venn IZA Bonn

Disagreement in Partners’ Reports of Financial Difficulty We use unique data in which both partners report about household finances to demonstrate that there is often disagreement about whether the household has experienced financial difficulty in the past year. Four alternative explanations for this disagreement are tested using the data. The results indicate that disagreement may be related t...

2010
Montek Ahluwalia Nicholas Carter

I discuss the measurement of world poverty and inequality, with particular attention to the role of purchasing power parity (PPP) price indexes from the International Comparison Project. Global inequality increased with the latest revision of the ICP, and this reduced the global poverty line relative to the US dollar. The recent large increase of nearly half a billion poor people came from an i...

2007
Andrew E. Clark Paul Frijters Michael Shields ANDREW E. CLARK PAUL FRIJTERS MICHAEL A. SHIELDS

Relative Income, Happiness and Utility: An Explanation for the Easterlin Paradox and Other Puzzles The well-known Easterlin paradox points out that average happiness has remained constant over time despite sharp rises in GNP per head. At the same time, a micro literature has typically found positive correlations between individual income and individual measures of subjective well-being. This pa...

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