Reconciling previously contradictory results, researchers find that for most people, there's a steady link between higher happiness and more money. The exception is people who are financially well-off but unhappy; for them, more money does not help.
From: University of Pennsylvania
March 6, 2023 -- Are
people who earn more money happier in daily life? Though it seems like a
straightforward question, research had previously returned contradictory
findings, leaving uncertainty about its answer.
Foundational work
published in 2010 from Princeton University's Daniel Kahneman and Angus Deaton
had found that day-to-day happiness rose as annual income increased, but above
$75,000 it leveled off and happiness plateaued. In contrast, work published in
2021 from the University of Pennsylvania's Matthew Killingsworth found that
happiness rose steadily with income well beyond $75,000, without evidence of a
plateau.
To reconcile the
differences, the two paired up in what's known as an adversarial collaboration,
joining forces with Penn Integrates Knowledge University Professor Barbara
Mellers as arbiter. In a new Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences paper, the trio shows that, on average, larger incomes are
associated with ever-increasing levels of happiness. Zoom in, however, and the
relationship becomes more complex, revealing that within that overall trend, an
unhappy cohort within each income group shows a sharp rise in happiness up to
$100,000 annually and then plateaus.
"In the simplest
terms, this suggests that for most people larger incomes are associated with
greater happiness," says Killingsworth, a senior fellow at Penn's Wharton
School and lead paper author. "The exception is people who are financially
well-off but unhappy. For instance, if you're rich and miserable, more money
won't help. For everyone else, more money was associated with higher happiness
to somewhat varying degrees."
Mellers digs into this
last notion, noting that emotional well-being and income aren't connected by a
single relationship. "The function differs for people with different
levels of emotional well-being," she says. Specifically, for the least
happy group, happiness rises with income until $100,000, then shows no further
increase as income grows. For those in the middle range of emotional
well-being, happiness increases linearly with income, and for the happiest
group the association actually accelerates above $100,000.
Joining forces The researchers began this combined effort
recognizing that their previous work had drawn different conclusions.
Kahneman's 2010 study showed a flattening pattern where Killingsworth's 2021
study did not. As its name suggests, an adversarial collaboration of this type
-- a notion originated by Kahneman -- aims to solve scientific disputes or
disagreements by bringing together the differing parties, along with a
third-party mediator.
Killingsworth,
Kahneman, and Mellers focused on a new hypothesis that both a happy majority
and an unhappy minority exist. For the former, they surmised, happiness keeps
rising as more money comes in; the latter's happiness improves as income rises
but only up to a certain income threshold, after which it progresses no
further.
To test this new
hypothesis, they looked for the flattening pattern in data from Killingworth's
study, which he had collected through an app he created called Track Your
Happiness. Several times a day, the app pings participants at random moments,
asking a variety of questions including how they feel on a scale from
"very good" to "very bad." Taking an average of the
person's happiness and income, Killingsworth draws conclusions about how the
two variables are linked.
A breakthrough in the
new partnership came early on when the researchers realized that the 2010 data,
which had revealed the happiness plateau, had actually been measuring
unhappiness in particular rather than happiness in general. "It's easiest
to understand with an example," Killingsworth says. Imagine a cognitive
test for dementia that most healthy people pass easily. While such a test could
detect the presence and severity of cognitive dysfunction, it wouldn't reveal
much about general intelligence since most healthy people would receive the
same perfect score.
"In the same way,
the 2010 data showing a plateau in happiness had mostly perfect scores, so it
tells us about the trend in the unhappy end of the happiness distribution,
rather than the trend of happiness in general. Once you recognize that, the two
seemingly contradictory findings aren't necessarily incompatible,"
Killingsworth says. "And what we found bore out that possibility in an
incredibly beautiful way. When we looked at the happiness trend for unhappy
people in the 2021 data, we found exactly the same pattern as was found in
2010; happiness rises relatively steeply with income and then plateaus."
"The two findings
that seemed utterly contradictory actually result from data that are amazingly
consistent," he says.
Implications of this
work Drawing these
conclusions would have been challenging had the two research teams not come
together, says Mellers, who suggests there's no better way than adversarial
collaborations to resolve scientific conflict.
"This kind of
collaboration requires far greater self-discipline and precision in thought
than the standard procedure," she says. "Collaborating with an
adversary -- or even a non-adversary -- is not easy, but both parties are
likelier to recognize the limits of their claims." Indeed, that's what
happened, leading to a better understanding of the relationship between money
and happiness.
And these findings have
real-world implications, according to Killingsworth. For one, they could inform
thinking about tax rates or how to compensate employees. And, of course, they
matter to individuals as they navigate career choices or weigh a larger income
against other priorities in life, Killingsworth says.
However, he adds that
for emotional well-being money isn't the be all end all. "Money is just
one of the many determinants of happiness. Money is not the secret to
happiness, but it can probably help a bit," he says.
Does more
money correlate with greater happiness? -- ScienceDaily
No comments:
Post a Comment