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13Nov/11Off

Happiness & Money

By Kevin

Does money bring happiness? Apparently for some, it may bring more misery; and this may be the case for the ultra, mighty rich who are basically not such happiness-efficient consumers of material wealth (ie. they already have so much material wealth that their riches can't buy the marginal stuff they desire). This is the finding of a paper published late last year, The Heterogeneous Effects of Income Changes on Happiness.

While 98% of people get a bit more satisfaction out of life (but not a lot) when their incomes rise, the remaining 2% are known as "frustrated achievers" — more money only makes them more unhappy, according to a team led by Leonardo Becchetti of the University of Rome Tor Vergata in Italy. Studying data on UK households, the researchers found that 70% of the frustrated achievers are female, and divorce is more common among this group than among the rest of the population.

Which brings me to the interesting idea explored in a public lecture in LSE last month; two professors 'debate' on the validity of using happiness as a measure of social progress rather than the 'traditional' indicators of income-measurements and development figures (mortality, access to services, nutrition, etc).

Indeed, happiness might often be relative and too often depends on context and circumstances. Our method of asking people if they are happy is as good as trying to measure the wealth of economy by randomly selecting people on the streets and then noting the amount of cash in their wallets. Too much of data relating to happiness is being missed out in the way it is captured now, making it difficult for happiness to be a measure of social progress though ideally, it actually serves as a good benchmark.

8Jan/11Off

Aging Happy

By Kevin

If you're old (like me), you'll probably be happy to learn about the U-bend theory of happiness currently forwarded by some experts in the field, suggesting that people generally gets happier and more satisfied with their lives after mid-forties (the average is exactly that figure).

2Sep/10Off

Bad to be good

By Kevin

Weigh Balance

Right amount of selfish and selfless

Recent studies showed that people are not only irritated by selfish people, but also those who are exceptionally selfless. In a recent paper published by Craig Parks and Asako Stone titled, "The Desire to Expel Unselfish Members From the Group", being selfless doesn't make you any more popular than selfish people. The Economist explains this idea of too much virtue becoming a vice in the eyes of people.

People are a fussy lot. It's hard to please them. They like those who are like them but a little nicer and prettier and quietly despise those people who are a little meaner and less beautiful than them though the process fuels their own ego and makes them secretly happy as well. But they think the extremely selfish and mean people are irritating and want to be away from them; now we all know they do that to those who are extremely selfless and nice as well. People care about comparisons, they care about relative positions. I've long ago wrote about 'Reference Anxiety' and I explained the dilemma between happiness and equality.

Everyone likes the idea that others are also human, and large deviations from what they themselves are, or have, or experienced, is just unhumanly. That's why it's okay to cheat on your Xbox games and those gamer-saints can just remain holy.