The Effect of Income on General Life Satisfaction and Dissatisfaction

Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

Stefan Boes, Rainer Winkelmann

In: Social Indicators Research 95 (2010), 1, 111-128

Abstract

Increasing evidence from the empirical economic and psychological literature suggests that positive and negative well-being are more than opposite ends of the same phenomenon. Two separate measures of the dependent variable may therefore be needed when analyzing the determinants of subjective well-being. We investigate asymmetries in the effect of income on subjective well-being with a single-item measure of general life satisfaction. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel 1984–2004, and a flexible multiple-index ordered probit panel data model with varying thresholds, we find that income has only a minor effect on high satisfaction but significantly reduces dissatisfaction.



Keywords: Generalized ordered probit model, Marginal probability effects, Random effects, Fixed effects, Life-satisfaction
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-009-9452-7

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