>BOOST O2 >> The Odds of Happiness

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What Increases the Odds of Happiness

What types of people are more likely to be happy?

A new National Bureau of Economic Research working paper called “International Happiness,” by economists David G. Blanchflower of Dartmouth College in the U.S. and Andrew J. Oswald  of the University of Warwick in England, offers some insights.
Blanchflower and Oswald give an overview of findings, in a number of nations, about factors that are associated statistically with either increased or decreased levels of reported well-being. Among the characteristics that they say have been shown to be linked, in people in a substantial number of nations, to a greater likelihood of happiness, are being:

  • Young or old (rather than in midlife)
  • Financially well-off
  • Educated
  • Married
  • Employed
  • Physically healthy
  • A person who exercises
  • Someone who eats a diet that contains lots of fruits and vegetables
  • Not overweight.

In other words, if your mother or father advised you to eat right and exercise, get a good education, get a good job and get married, they had a point: People who are successful in following those pieces of advice are, statistically speaking, more likely to be among the happy.  (However, if mom and/or dad also advised you to have children, you may want to note: The economists report that, at least in the U.S., having children at home is associated with less happiness.)
Some other interesting findings about the U.S. that Blanchflower and Oswald report:

  • In the U.S., self-employed people are likely to be happier than other people earning about the same amount.
  • Unemployment is linked to a lot of unhappiness — and, even among those employed, there is a strong association between job insecurity and unhappiness.  
  • Overall, Americans’ happiness level has not increased since the 1970s, and may be a little lower.

What factors are associated with greater levels of happiness in a country as a whole?  Here’s what the authors of the working paper “International Happiness” report:

“Happy countries are disproportionately rich, educated, democratic, trusting, and low-unemployment.”  (Quotation © 2011 by David G. Blanchflower and Andrew J. Oswald.)

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>O2 LIFE > What makes PEOPLE HAPPY?

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What makes Americans and Europeans happy?

  by Deborah Braconnier report Happiness

(PhysOrg.com) — According to a new research study, Europeans are happier when they have a day off and work less, while their American counterparts would rather be working those extra hours. Published in the Journal of Happiness Studies, the research, led by Adam Okulicz-Kozaryn from the University of Texas, looks at survey results of Europeans and Americans and how they identified being happy.

Based on the study results, who described themselves as being “very happy” went from 28 percent down to 23 percent as their work hours increased. , on the other hand, remained at 43 percent regardless of how many hours they worked.
The researchers say that due to a lack of research in this field, they cannot completely say that working more hours makes people happier, though they do have a few explanations.
Their thoughts on the reasoning behind the results point toward the different aspirations and self-worth people have. Europeans tend to be more concerned with enjoying and living life to the fullest, while Americans are busy following the “American Dream” and traveling a road toward financial success.
Previous research shows that can come from wealth and as a person’s income and employment status increase, so does their satisfaction with life. Americans believe that their hard is what will move them up the ladder, so they appear happier while working more hours. They believe that by working these hours, they are achieving more and reaching more.
The researchers would like to conduct more studies, perhaps comparing the different European countries with America instead of all of Europe as a whole. They believe is tied to what people’s goals are, and comparing the different goals of the people in the different countries would need to be considered as well.
More information: Europeans Work to Live and Americans Live to Work (Who is Happy to Work More: Americans or Europeans?), by Adam Okulicz-Kozaryn, JOURNAL OF HAPPINESS STUDIES, Volume 12, Number 2, 225-243, DOI:10.1007/s10902-010-9188-8
Abstract
This paper compares the working hours and life satisfaction of Americans and Europeans using the World Values Survey, Eurobarometer and General Social Survey. The purpose is to explore the relationship between working hours and happiness in Europe and America. Previous research on the topic does not test the premise that working more makes Americans happier than Europeans. The findings suggest that Americans may be happier working more because they believe more than Europeans do that hard work is associated with success.

via Livescience
© 2010 PhysOrg.com

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