The Origins of Happiness

(Elliott) #1

2 Income


Wealth is like seawater. The more we drink, the thirstier
we become.

— Schopenhauer

Does more money buy more happiness? It does, but less than


many people might think. There are two extreme views,


both equally fallacious. On the one hand there are careless


studies claiming that money makes no difference. This is


certainly wrong, if we are talking about life- satisfaction as


the outcome. On the other hand, there are millions of indi-


viduals who think that more money would totally change


their well- being. For most people, this too is a delusion.


The effect of income on happiness is in fact one of the


best- measured effects in all happiness research. In this chap-


ter we present the evidence. This is the first of five chapters,


all of which follow a fairly standard format. Each chapter


takes the effects of one factor (here income) and begins


with evidence from the British Cohort Study, mostly cross-


sectional. It then goes on to time- series data on individuals


drawn from three panel studies for Britain, Germany, and


Australia, as well as cross- section data on the United States.


For every factor we also examine the key role of social com-


parisons and adaptation, before tracing how the factor itself


is determined by earlier childhood experiences.


There is one other important general point. From now


on we measure life- satisfaction not in terms of its standard


deviation (as in Chapter 1) but in its natural units, running

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