Does happiness pay? An exploration based on panel data from Russia
Graham, Carol; Eggers, Andrew; & Sukhtankar, Sandip. (2004). Does happiness pay? An exploration based on panel data from Russia. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 55(3), 319-42.
Graham, Carol; Eggers, Andrew; & Sukhtankar, Sandip. (2004). Does happiness pay? An exploration based on panel data from Russia. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 55(3), 319-42.
187.ris — Octet Stream, 995 bytes
Well-being research has supported the common sense view that income, health, and other factors affect happiness. We use panel data from Russia to assess the reverse causation — that happiness itself affects income, health, and other factors. We find that people who had higher “residual happiness” in 1995 – people who were happier after correcting for the usual determinants of well-being – made more money and were in better health in a survey 5 years later. Psychologists attribute a large part of well-being to factors such as self-esteem and optimism. The same factors appear to influence individuals’ wealth and health.
JOUR
Graham, Carol
Eggers, Andrew
Sukhtankar, Sandip
2004
Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization
55
3
319-42
10.1016/j.jebo.2003.09.002
187