Rising Aspirations Dampen Satisfaction
Pre-print, Working paper: It is commonly-believed that education is a good thing for individuals. Yet its correlation with subjective well-being is most often only weakly positive, or even negative, despite the many associated better individual-level outcomes We here square the circle using novel Japanese data on happiness aspirations. If reported happiness comes from a comparison of outcomes to aspirations, then any phenomenon raising both at the same time will have only a muted effect on reported well-being. We find that around half of the happiness effect of education is cancelled out by higher aspirations, and suggest a similar dampening effect for income.
Author(s)
Andrew E. Clark, Akiko Kamesaka, Teruyuki Tamura
Date of publication
- 2015
Keywords JEL
Keywords
- Education
- Satisfaction
- Aspirations
- Income
Internal reference
- PSE Working Papers n° 2015-08
URL of the HAL notice
Version
- 1