The Origins of Happiness

(Elliott) #1
Chapter 4

people are with all the different possible positions in the


labor force.


In Table 4.1 we compare the life- satisfaction in each


group with that of people with full- time jobs, holding con-


stant only age and gender. The unemployed are less happy


by a staggering 1.5 points, see column (1). By contrast self-


employed people are happier by nearly 0.2 points.^5 How-


ever the effect of unemployment falls to around 1 point


when, in column (2), all the other standard factors (includ-


ing income) are introduced. So unemployment hurts for


many reasons beyond the loss of income.


Similar results are obtained in the panel datasets for


Britain and Germany (see Table 4.2).^6 When all the data


for each country are pooled and subjected to cross- section


analysis, unemployment reduces life- satisfaction by 0.7 of a


point in Britain, 1 whole point in Germany and rather less


in Australia and the United States.


However all cross- section estimates are subject to bias


from omitted personal variables. We can remove this bias by


introducing a fixed personal effect for each individual. The


Table 4.1. How life- satisfaction (0– 10) is affected by labor- force status
(British Cohort Study)

Compared with
full- time workers Cross- section Cross- section Panel


Unemployed −1.55 (.13) −1.06 (.15) −0.30 (.15)


Part- time workers −0.01 (.05) 0.05 (.05) 0.09 (.07)


Self- employed 0.19 (.05) 0.25 (.09) 0.34 (.08)


Out of labor force −0.08 (.06) −0.09 (.10) 0.26 (.09)


Controls Age, gender All All + fixed
effect

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