Income comparisons are important for individual well-being. We examine the shape of the relationship between relative income and life satisfaction, and test empirically if the features of the value function of prospect theory carry on to experienced utility. We draw on a unique dataset for a middle-income country, that allows us to work with an endogenous reference income, which differs for individuals with the same observable characteristics, depending on the perception error about their relative position in the distribution. We find the value function for experienced utility to be concave for both positive and, at odds with prospect theory, also negative relative income. Loss aversion is only satisfied for incomes that are sufficiently di...
Relative utility has become an important concept in several disjoint areas of economics. I present a...
In recent years economists began studying subjective well-being thoroughly, and often find a certain...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...
Altres ajuts: acord transformatiu CRUE-CSICWe are very grateful to Maarten Vendrik, who provided ext...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person’s income relative to the average income in ...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the level of...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the level of...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the level of...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the level of...
Abstract A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the...
Abstract A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the...
Using a unique dataset we study both the actual and self-perceived relationship between subjective w...
This paper proposes that individuals care about the relative income of proximate reference groups. M...
An earlier version was presented at the International Confederation for the Advancement of Behaviora...
Empirical studies of the relative income hypothesis have found both positive and negative effects of...
Relative utility has become an important concept in several disjoint areas of economics. I present a...
In recent years economists began studying subjective well-being thoroughly, and often find a certain...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...
Altres ajuts: acord transformatiu CRUE-CSICWe are very grateful to Maarten Vendrik, who provided ext...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person’s income relative to the average income in ...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the level of...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the level of...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the level of...
A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the level of...
Abstract A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the...
Abstract A central finding in happiness research is that a person's life satisfaction depends on the...
Using a unique dataset we study both the actual and self-perceived relationship between subjective w...
This paper proposes that individuals care about the relative income of proximate reference groups. M...
An earlier version was presented at the International Confederation for the Advancement of Behaviora...
Empirical studies of the relative income hypothesis have found both positive and negative effects of...
Relative utility has become an important concept in several disjoint areas of economics. I present a...
In recent years economists began studying subjective well-being thoroughly, and often find a certain...
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comThis paper addresses two important issu...