幸福与经济繁荣

O. Stavrova, S. Asbach
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摘要

在本章中,作者回顾了心理学和经济学文献中关于经济繁荣与幸福(或主观幸福感)之间关系的现有研究。大多数横断面研究都集中在收入和主观幸福感之间存在小到中等的正相关关系,而生活满意度和消极(但不是积极)情绪之间的关系更强。收入对幸福感的影响也在纵向和准实验研究中得到了证明,表明收入的增加可能会导致幸福感的增加,尽管这种因果关系的证据仍然薄弱。为了理解收入-幸福联系背后的机制,文献广泛依赖于两种理论视角:需求满足理论和相对标准理论。根据前者,收入有助于幸福,因为它允许人们满足他们的需求和欲望。这一解释得到了一些研究的支持,这些研究表明,收入在满足需求方面具有特别强的影响——在穷人(与富人相比)和穷人(与富人相比)国家的居民中。根据相对标准理论,收入对幸福的贡献在于它允许人们进行向下的社会比较。与这种说法相一致的是,研究表明,绝对收入和相对收入都与幸福感呈正相关。最后,作者记录了一些重要的调节因素和收入-幸福联系的边界条件,包括性格特征、消费和支出模式的个体差异。本章最后指出了迄今为止尚未解决的问题,并概述了未来研究的潜在方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Happiness and economic prosperity
In this chapter, the authors review existing research on the associations between economic prosperity and happiness (or subjective well-being) in psychological and economic literature. Most cross-sectional studies converge on reporting a small-to-moderate positive correlation between income and subjective well-being, with stronger relationships reported for life satisfaction and negative (but not positive) emotions. The effect of income on happiness has been shown in longitudinal and quasi-experimental studies as well, suggesting that rises in income might lead to gains in happiness, although the evidence for such causal effects remains weak. Seeking to understand the mechanism behind the income–happiness link, the literature has broadly relied on two theoretical perspectives: needs satisfaction and relative standards theories. According to the former, income contributes to happiness as it allows people to satisfy their needs and desires. This explanation has found support in studies showing that income has a particularly strong effect when it contributes to needs satisfaction most – in poor (vs wealthy) individuals and in residents of poor (vs wealthy) countries. According to the relative standards theories, income contributes to happiness to the extent that it allows one to make downward social comparisons. Consistent with this account, studies have shown both absolute and relative income to be positively associated with happiness. Finally, the authors document a number of important moderators and boundary conditions of the income–happiness link, including individual differences in dispositional characteristics, consumption and spending patterns. The chapter concludes by pointing to so far unresolved questions and sketching potential directions for future studies.
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