Happiness in Countries: Does Greater Wealth Equal Happiness: Difference between revisions

From Dickinson College Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Foltinj (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Foltinj (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''<p align="center">Within this argument lies two theories.  On one hand some people believe that in many cases YES a wealthier country will experience higher happiness, but on the other hand there are many economists who think that there is NO relationship </p>'''
'''<p align="center">Within this argument lies two theories.  On one hand some people believe that in many cases YES a wealthier country will experience higher happiness, but on the other hand there are many economists who think that there is NO relationship </p>'''
== Evidence for a Connection ==




Line 12: Line 16:


[[Image:Blah.JPG|thumb|Description]]
[[Image:Blah.JPG|thumb|Description]]
== Evidence Against ==

Revision as of 21:36, 17 April 2006

Within this argument lies two theories. On one hand some people believe that in many cases YES a wealthier country will experience higher happiness, but on the other hand there are many economists who think that there is NO relationship


Evidence for a Connection

So does a higher GDP have permanent effects on a nation’s happiness? GDP does help buy extra happiness. But other factors have been forming throughout the years that have gradually offset the benefits of extra real income. To make this correlation easier to find we used the ‘GDP in a happiness Regressions’ equation, provided in the essay, The Macroeconomics of Happiness.” The equation is as follows:

Description

  • HAPPYjit: well-being level reported by an individual ‘j’ in country ‘i’ in the year ‘t’
  • GDPit: Gross Domestic Product per capita in that country
  • PERSONALjit: Personal characteristics of respondents (income, marital status, education, employed/unemployed, age
Description



Evidence Against