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Conal Smith 27 June 2012 Subjective Well-being: what we know and what we need to know
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Subjective well-being and the OECD Better policies for better lives Better measures Subjective well-being Social contact Governance…
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What we thought we knew Subjective well-being is just “happiology” People have a “set point” to which their level of subjective well-being always returns (people fully adapt to changes in their circumstances) There is no meaningful change in national levels of subjective well-being over time Everyone is “mostly satisfied” with their life (people’s responses depend entirely on their frame of reference) People object to answering such general questions
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1. SWB is not just about happiness
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2. There is no set point for SWB Lucas, R., Clark, A., Georgellis, Y. and Diener, E. (2003), "Reexamining adaptation and the set point model of happiness: Reactions to changes in marital status", Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
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2. There is no set point for SWB Lucas, R., Clark, A, Georgellis, Y. and Diener, E. (2004), "Unemployment alters the set point of life satisfaction", Psychological Science.
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3. National SWB levels can change
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4. Not “mostly satisfied”
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5. SWB has low item-specific non-response rates 11
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12 5. SWB has low item-specific non-response rates
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What we need to know Is eudaimonic well-being uni-dimensional or multi- dimensional? What is the minimal set of measures needed to adequately capture affect? What is best practice in domain-specific well-being questions? How important is cultural bias?
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Affect and Eudaimonia ONS core questions on subjective well-being – life satisfaction, life worthwhile, happy yesterday, anxious yesterday
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Eudaimonia Source: Huppert, F. and So, T. (2011) “Flourishing across Europe: Application of a new conceptual framework for defining well-being.”, Social Indicators Research
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Affect measures Draft OECD Affect questions The following questions ask about how you felt yesterday. I will now read out a list of ways you might have felt yesterday. Did you experience the following feelings a lot yesterday? C1. How about enjoyment?[YES/NO] C2. How about calm and peaceful?[YES/NO] C3. How about worry?[YES/NO] C4. How about sadness?[YES/NO] C5. How about happy?[YES/NO] C6. How about depressed?[YES/NO] C7. How about anger?[YES/NO] C8. How about stress?[YES/NO] C9. How about physical pain?[YES/NO] C10. Did you smile or laugh a lot yesterday?[YES/NO]
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Affect measures Draft OECD domain evaluation questions The following questions ask how satisfied you feel about specific aspects of your life, on a scale from 0 to 10. Zero means you feel”completely dissatisfed” and 10 means “completely satisfied”. E1. How satisfied are you with your standard of living?[0-10] E2. How satisfied are your with your health?[0-10] E3. How satisfied are you with what you are achieving in life?[0-10] E4. How satisfied are you with your personal relationships?[0-10] E5. How satisfied are you with how safe you feel?[0-10] E6. How satisfied are you with feeling part of your community?[0-10] E7. How satisfied are you with your future security?[0-10] E8. How satisfied are you with the amount of time you have to do the things that you like doing? [0-10] For respondents who are employed only E9. How satisfied are you with your job?[0-10]
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Cultural bias Brazil, Chile, Mexico Japan, Korea
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Cultural bias Country-specific effects may have at least four sources: –1) Unmeasured life circumstances. –2) Differences in how people feel about their life circumstances. –3) Language differences that influence scale use. –4) Cultural response biases.
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