The dark side of conscientiousness: Conscientious people experience greater drops in life satisfaction following unemployment

Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

Christopher J. Boyce, Alex M. Wood, Gordon D. Brown

In: Journal of Research in Personality 44 (2010), 4, 535-539

Abstract

Conscientious individuals tend to achieve more and have higher well-being. This has led to a view that conscientiousness is always positive for well-being. We hypothesize that conscientiousness could be detrimental to well-being when failure is experienced, such as when individuals become unemployed. In a 4-year longitudinal study of 9570 individuals interviewed yearly we show that the drop in an individual’s life satisfaction following unemployment is significantly moderated by their conscientiousness. After 3 years of unemployment individuals high in conscientiousness (i.e. one standard deviation above the mean) experience a 120% higher decrease in life satisfaction than those at low levels. Thus the positive relationship typically seen between conscientiousness and well-being is reversed: conscientiousness is therefore not always good for well-being.



Keywords: Conscientiousness; Subjective well-being; Unemployment

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