This article makes three main contributions to the economics of happiness literature. First, using a novel data set of about 90,000 Japanese workers surveyed in annual cross-sections between 1990 and 2004, it demonstrates that individuals experience strong disutility when they perceive that their coworkers earn relatively higher wages. In contrast with other tests of the relative utility hypothesis in the literature, our estimation relies on workers’ self-reported beliefs of their peers’ wages, which we argue are more closely aligned to the “true” reference-group benchmark than the assumed comparison income measures employed in other studies. Second, the article shows important heterogeneous effects of both absolute and relative income on h...
International audienceWhile there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness lite...
AbstractStudies of the relative income hypothesis find positive and negative effects of relative inc...
International audienceWhile there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness lite...
This article makes three main contributions to the economics of happiness literature. First, using a...
This article uses survey data of workers in Japan to study the effects of own and self-reported refe...
Empirical studies of the relative income hypothesis have found both positive and negative effects of...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...
There are a variety of studies that show that absolute income is positively correlated with individu...
There are a variety of studies that show that absolute income is positively correlated with individu...
Using data from the European Social Survey (ESS), we examine the link between income and subjective ...
While there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness literature that income com...
There are a variety of studies that show that absolute income is positively correlated with individu...
International audienceWhile there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness lite...
International audienceWhile there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness lite...
AbstractStudies of the relative income hypothesis find positive and negative effects of relative inc...
International audienceWhile there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness lite...
This article makes three main contributions to the economics of happiness literature. First, using a...
This article uses survey data of workers in Japan to study the effects of own and self-reported refe...
Empirical studies of the relative income hypothesis have found both positive and negative effects of...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...
There are a variety of studies that show that absolute income is positively correlated with individu...
There are a variety of studies that show that absolute income is positively correlated with individu...
Using data from the European Social Survey (ESS), we examine the link between income and subjective ...
While there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness literature that income com...
There are a variety of studies that show that absolute income is positively correlated with individu...
International audienceWhile there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness lite...
International audienceWhile there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness lite...
AbstractStudies of the relative income hypothesis find positive and negative effects of relative inc...
International audienceWhile there is now something of a consensus in the economics of happiness lite...