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Human Happiness and the Midlife ‘Crisis’ Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK I would like to acknowledge that much of this work is joint with coauthors Andrew Clark, Nick Powdthavee, David G. Blanchflower, Alex Weiss, Rainer Winkelmann, Dilip Jeste, and Steve Wu. I thank the ESRC for support.
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Human beings have feelings.
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Humans have feelings, and feelings matter.
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What happens as we get older?
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Is there scientific evidence for a midlife crisis?
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The bottom line today
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There really is a midlife low
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The bottom line today There really is a midlife low It happens equally in men and women
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The bottom line today There really is a midlife low It happens equally in men and women It is scientifically unexplained
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The bottom line today There really is a midlife low It happens equally in men and women It is scientifically unexplained There is a possibility that it is somehow biological.
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How do researchers study such a thing?
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Using random samples from many nations: Researchers try to understand what influences the psychological wellbeing of (i) (ii)
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Using random samples from many nations: Researchers try to understand what influences the psychological wellbeing of (i) individuals (ii) nations.
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Regression equations
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Mental well-being = f(Age, gender, education level, income, marital status, friendship networks, region, year…)
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Big effects on happiness: Unemployment Divorce Marriage Bereavement Friendship networks Health No effects from children [but + for grandchildren: Nick Powdthavee]
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Here is the key fact:
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The pattern of a typical person’s happiness through life
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This holds in various settings
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The latest UK government data (Sample: 100,000 Britons) Blanchflower-Oswald estimates
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Recent US data (Sample: 400,000 Americans) Blanchflower-Oswald estimates
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The probability of depression by age Males, LFS data set 2004-2006 -0.01 -0.005 0 0.005 0.01 0.015 0.02 19381942194619501954195819621966197019741978198219861990 Year of birth Regression coefficient
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-0.014 -0.012 -0.01 -0.008 -0.006 -0.004 -0.002 0 0.002 1942194619501954195819621966197019741978198219861990 Depression by age among females: LFS data 2004-2006Q2 Year of birth Regression coefficient
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The Relationship Between the Probability of Antidepressant Use and Age (European nations)
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But what causes the midlife dip?
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It is nothing to do with having young children, and is found all over the world.
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But what causes the midlife dip? It is nothing to do with having young children, and is found all over the world. 65+ nations so far.
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Why?
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Until recently, the leading theory was one of thwarted aspirations.
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But researchers around the world must now consider throwing away that theory.
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Weiss, A., King, J.E., Inoue-Murayam, M., Matsuzama, T. and Oswald, A.J. (2012). ‘Evidence for a midlife crisis in great apes consistent with the U-shape in human well- being’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, vol. 109, pp. 19949- 19952.
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Happiness in humans
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Happiness in great apes
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There is also new, and truly longitudinal, cross-national evidence. Cheng, T., Powdthavee, N., and Oswald, A.J. (2015). ‘Longitudinal evidence for a midlife low in human well-being: Results from four data sets’, Economic Journal, forthcoming.
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We exploit the properties of a quadratic.
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What lesson might be drawn?
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A midlife crisis, in some form, is intrinsically natural.
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What lesson might be drawn? A midlife crisis, in some form, is intrinsically natural.
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However, currently, this puzzle remains to be understood:
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Human Happiness and the Midlife ‘Crisis’ Andrew Oswald (happily oldish)
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Human Happiness and the Midlife ‘Crisis’ Andrew Oswald (happily oldish) Downloadable papers: www.andrewoswald.comwww.andrewoswald.com
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