The Origins of Happiness

(Elliott) #1
Health of Mind and Body

Physical illness is measured in Britain and the United


States by the number of physical illnesses or conditions


(like diabetes, angina, stroke, asthma, arthritis, etc.).^7 In Aus-


tralia it is measured by the physical components of the SF36


questionnaire, entered with a lag.


To answer our original question we can turn all the con-


tinuous variables into discrete variables. So in Table 6.1 we


examine the effect of eliminating



  • Poverty (defined as the lowest 20% of incomes)

  • Unemployment

  • Physical illness (defined as the lowest 20% of physi-
    cal health), and

  • Mental illness (defined as in the text above, or in
    the BHPS as the lowest 20% on the GHQ- 12).


None of these variables is the same as low life- satisfaction,


but all of them contribute to it. Let us see by how much.


The approach in Table 6.1 is simple.^8 In the first column


we ask by how much a person’s probability of misery is in-


creased if they have each characteristic like poverty or de-


pression, other things equal. The numbers are regression co-


efficients estimated by OLS with all variables shown being


dummy variables (1, 0).^9 In the second column, we record


what proportion of the total population have the characteris-


tic in question. In the third column we multiply the effect of


the characteristic by its prevalence, which provides the answer


to our original question: How much misery would be eliminated


if we eliminated the characteristic in question (ceteris paribus)?


The results are remarkable. In the United States, a person


with diagnosed mental illness is 0.10 points of probability


more likely than otherwise to be in misery. Of the total pop-


ulation, 22% have diagnosed mental illness. So if there were

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