Does Income Inequality Influence Subjective Wellbeing? Evidence from 21 Developing Countries

Does income inequality matter for subjective wellbeing? Using data from 5945 individuals residing in 182 villages in rural areas of 21 developing countries, we test the relative importance of income inequality measured at different levels (country and village) in subjective wellbeing. Country-level...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of happiness studies 2019-04, Vol.20 (4), p.1197-1215
Hauptverfasser: Reyes-García, Victoria, Angelsen, Arild, Shively, Gerald E., Minkin, Dmitrij
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container_end_page 1215
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1197
container_title Journal of happiness studies
container_volume 20
creator Reyes-García, Victoria
Angelsen, Arild
Shively, Gerald E.
Minkin, Dmitrij
description Does income inequality matter for subjective wellbeing? Using data from 5945 individuals residing in 182 villages in rural areas of 21 developing countries, we test the relative importance of income inequality measured at different levels (country and village) in subjective wellbeing. Country-level inequality might increase subjective wellbeing because it signals potential upward mobility, whereas village-level inequality might exacerbate negative effects of local peer-group comparisons on subjective wellbeing. The two measures of income inequality are not correlated, supporting the intuition that these variables might capture different aspects of income inequality. Although we observe broad patterns that suggest inequality measured at different levels might have associations with subjective wellbeing, and with potentially differing signs, the low magnitude of these associations and their weak statistical significance do not provide enough evidence to support the argument that the level at which income inequality is measured explains overall patterns of subjective wellbeing. Our results therefore leave open for future research the question of what underlying forces might account for these observed patterns.
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source SpringerLink Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Developing countries
Economic models
Economics
Income inequality
LDCs
Personality and Social Psychology
Philosophy
Positive Psychology
Quality of Life Research
Research Paper
Rural areas
Social mobility
Social Sciences
Statistical significance
Villages
Well being
title Does Income Inequality Influence Subjective Wellbeing? Evidence from 21 Developing Countries
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