Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Happiness and Socioeconomic Conditions: Differences Across Countries and Individuals' Personality Traits
Individuals’ reactions to the impacts of Covid-19 on their lives and their happiness may be different. The differences in personality traits of those individuals can be affected by uncertainty, restrictions, quarantine, measures, etc. within the pandemic environment. We investigate the extent to whi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | İktisat politikasi araştırmaları dergisi 2022-07, Vol.9 (2), p.353-372 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Individuals’ reactions to the impacts of Covid-19 on their lives and their
happiness may be different. The differences in personality traits of those
individuals can be affected by uncertainty, restrictions, quarantine,
measures, etc. within the pandemic environment. We investigate the
extent to which they tend to behave in situations and to what extent
their happiness differs. We estimate that the pandemic affects people’s
happiness and that such situations may differ on the personality traits of
people. To this end, we explain both how happiness changes during the
pandemic and how individuals with certain personality traits are affected
by the pandemic both socioeconomically and in terms of happiness,
along with certain studies conducted so far and some of the data obtained
from the World Database of Happiness. Unhappiness has increased in
many countries due to the conditions brought by the pandemic, and
this is often related to economic policies. Changes in the way individuals
do business during the pandemic process, closing their workplaces due
to restrictions, being unemployed, or increasing their workload are the
most important factors that affect happiness. In general, those who were
most negatively affected by the pandemic are women, the unemployed,
and the poor, whom we can specify as the disadvantaged group even
before the pandemic. With this study, we advise policymakers to consider
happiness and personality traits when determining pandemic policy. |
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ISSN: | 2148-3876 2148-3876 |
DOI: | 10.26650/JEPR1063845 |