Two behavioural explanations of the Easterlin Paradox are commonly advanced. The first appeals to social comparisons, whereby individual i compares her income (Yit) to a comparison income level earned by some other individual or group j (Y*jt). The second explanation is that of adaptation to higher levels of income. This is of the same nature, but here the individual’s current income is compared to her own income in the past (i.e. Yit is compared to Yit-τ, for some positive value or values of τ). The first of these explanations has attracted far more empirical attention than has the second. This is probably for data-availability reasons, as the investigation of the latter requires panel information. There is also a suspicion that large chan...
Do people adapt to changes in income? This paper shows that there is no evidence of adaptation to in...
Analysis confirms a statistically significant positive but very small long run relationship between ...
Adaptation, anticipation and social-reference effects on happiness are strongly interrelated phenome...
Two behavioural explanations of the Easterlin Paradox are commonly advanced. The first appeals to so...
In this paper, we examine the relationship between income and income satisfaction in the pool of dev...
Two mechanisms have attracted considerable attention from researchers studying the effects of income...
In this paper, we examine the relationship between income and income satisfaction in the pool of de...
The Easterlin Paradox is about the contradiction between an evidence of a short-run relationship bet...
This paper develops a formal economic theory to explain the Easterlin paradox-average happiness leve...
This paper presents evidence of a positive but very small long run relationship between income growt...
The Easterlin Paradox is about the contradiction between an evidence of a short-run relationship bet...
There is now a great deal of micro-econometric evidence, both cross-section and panel, showing that ...
In 1974 Richard Easterlin presented data showing that there is no relationship between economic grow...
The Easterlin Paradox refers to the fact that happiness data are typically stationary in spite of co...
Do people adapt to changes in income? This paper shows that there is no evidence of adaptation to in...
Analysis confirms a statistically significant positive but very small long run relationship between ...
Adaptation, anticipation and social-reference effects on happiness are strongly interrelated phenome...
Two behavioural explanations of the Easterlin Paradox are commonly advanced. The first appeals to so...
In this paper, we examine the relationship between income and income satisfaction in the pool of dev...
Two mechanisms have attracted considerable attention from researchers studying the effects of income...
In this paper, we examine the relationship between income and income satisfaction in the pool of de...
The Easterlin Paradox is about the contradiction between an evidence of a short-run relationship bet...
This paper develops a formal economic theory to explain the Easterlin paradox-average happiness leve...
This paper presents evidence of a positive but very small long run relationship between income growt...
The Easterlin Paradox is about the contradiction between an evidence of a short-run relationship bet...
There is now a great deal of micro-econometric evidence, both cross-section and panel, showing that ...
In 1974 Richard Easterlin presented data showing that there is no relationship between economic grow...
The Easterlin Paradox refers to the fact that happiness data are typically stationary in spite of co...
Do people adapt to changes in income? This paper shows that there is no evidence of adaptation to in...
Analysis confirms a statistically significant positive but very small long run relationship between ...
Adaptation, anticipation and social-reference effects on happiness are strongly interrelated phenome...