The Easterlin Paradox is about the contradiction between an evidence of a short-run relationship between happiness and income growth and no evidence of a long-run relationship between happiness and income growth. The paper argues that there is confirmation of the Easterlin Paradox when the magnitude of the estimated long-run relationship is practically equal to zero notwithstanding its statistical significance. The findings of the paper support the Easterlin Paradox
The paper discusses five items pertinent to Palanca-Tan (2021) – namely, Easterlin paradox, Easterli...
Happiness is a complex and abstract emotion. However, it is also a useful Quality of Life metric tha...
Richer people are happier than poorer people, but when a country becomes richer over time, its peopl...
The Easterlin Paradox is about the contradiction between an evidence of a short-run relationship bet...
This paper presents evidence of a positive but very small long run relationship between income growt...
Analysis confirms a statistically significant positive but very small long run relationship between ...
Empirical analysis confirms the Easterlin Paradox: there is indeed a statistically significant and p...
The Easterlin Paradox—the perceived absence of a relationship between economic progress and happines...
The paper finds a statistically significant positive but very small long-run relationship between ec...
The 'Easterlin Paradox' holds that economic growth in nations does not buy greater happiness for the...
In 1974 Richard Easterlin presented data showing that there is no relationship between economic grow...
The 'Easterlin Paradox' holds that economic growth in nations does not buy greater happiness for the...
This paper develops a formal economic theory to explain the Easterlin paradox-average happiness leve...
__Abstract__ The 'Easterlin Paradox' holds that economic growth in nations does not buy greater h...
The Easterlin Paradox refers to the fact that happiness data are typically stationary in spite of co...
The paper discusses five items pertinent to Palanca-Tan (2021) – namely, Easterlin paradox, Easterli...
Happiness is a complex and abstract emotion. However, it is also a useful Quality of Life metric tha...
Richer people are happier than poorer people, but when a country becomes richer over time, its peopl...
The Easterlin Paradox is about the contradiction between an evidence of a short-run relationship bet...
This paper presents evidence of a positive but very small long run relationship between income growt...
Analysis confirms a statistically significant positive but very small long run relationship between ...
Empirical analysis confirms the Easterlin Paradox: there is indeed a statistically significant and p...
The Easterlin Paradox—the perceived absence of a relationship between economic progress and happines...
The paper finds a statistically significant positive but very small long-run relationship between ec...
The 'Easterlin Paradox' holds that economic growth in nations does not buy greater happiness for the...
In 1974 Richard Easterlin presented data showing that there is no relationship between economic grow...
The 'Easterlin Paradox' holds that economic growth in nations does not buy greater happiness for the...
This paper develops a formal economic theory to explain the Easterlin paradox-average happiness leve...
__Abstract__ The 'Easterlin Paradox' holds that economic growth in nations does not buy greater h...
The Easterlin Paradox refers to the fact that happiness data are typically stationary in spite of co...
The paper discusses five items pertinent to Palanca-Tan (2021) – namely, Easterlin paradox, Easterli...
Happiness is a complex and abstract emotion. However, it is also a useful Quality of Life metric tha...
Richer people are happier than poorer people, but when a country becomes richer over time, its peopl...