A specially designed household survey for rural China is used to analyse the determinants of aspirations for income, proxied by reported minimum income need, and the determinants of subjective well-being, both satisfaction with life and satisfaction with income. It is found that aspiration income is a positive function of actual income and reference income, and that subjective well-being is raised by actual income but lowered by aspiration income. These findings suggests the existence of a partial hedonic treadmill, and can help to explain why subjective well-being in China appears not to have risen despite rapid economic growth
In this article the structure of subjective well-being (SWB), the relationship between household inc...
Previous micro-level results from cross-sectional data from individual countries suggest that well-b...
Government programme interventions that improve rural settlements are expected to foster human devel...
A national household survey for 2002, containing a specially designed module on subjective well-bein...
A national household survey for 2002, containing a specially designed module on subjective well-bein...
We use data from two rounds of Chinese General Social Survey (CGSS) to study the determinants of sub...
There is now recognition that a population's overall level of well-being is defined not just by inco...
Many scholars focus on China’s booming economy and its social impacts, while there is little attenti...
Abstract: Does individual well-being depend on the absolute level of income and consumption or is it...
Does more money always mean that people are happier with their lives? To test the social comparison ...
Various measures of satisfaction with life or happiness in China appear not to have risen in recent ...
The paper presents subjective well-being functions for urban and rural China, based on a national ho...
In the past quarter century China’s real GDP per capita has multiplied over five times, an unprecede...
Happiness in China plummeted between 1990 and 2000 despite rapid economic growth. This finding contr...
The paper presents subjective well-being functions for urban and rural China, based on a national ho...
In this article the structure of subjective well-being (SWB), the relationship between household inc...
Previous micro-level results from cross-sectional data from individual countries suggest that well-b...
Government programme interventions that improve rural settlements are expected to foster human devel...
A national household survey for 2002, containing a specially designed module on subjective well-bein...
A national household survey for 2002, containing a specially designed module on subjective well-bein...
We use data from two rounds of Chinese General Social Survey (CGSS) to study the determinants of sub...
There is now recognition that a population's overall level of well-being is defined not just by inco...
Many scholars focus on China’s booming economy and its social impacts, while there is little attenti...
Abstract: Does individual well-being depend on the absolute level of income and consumption or is it...
Does more money always mean that people are happier with their lives? To test the social comparison ...
Various measures of satisfaction with life or happiness in China appear not to have risen in recent ...
The paper presents subjective well-being functions for urban and rural China, based on a national ho...
In the past quarter century China’s real GDP per capita has multiplied over five times, an unprecede...
Happiness in China plummeted between 1990 and 2000 despite rapid economic growth. This finding contr...
The paper presents subjective well-being functions for urban and rural China, based on a national ho...
In this article the structure of subjective well-being (SWB), the relationship between household inc...
Previous micro-level results from cross-sectional data from individual countries suggest that well-b...
Government programme interventions that improve rural settlements are expected to foster human devel...