Are Relative-Income Effects Constant across the Well-being Distribution?,
Fecha
24/09/2013Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
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This paper challenges the common assumption made by economists to date that
income comparisons are similarly important in different segments of the subjective wellbeing
(SWB) distribution. The results, based on the 2000 2007 waves of the German
SOEP and on a Generalized Ordered Probit for panel data, show that relative income, as
measured either by the mean income of the reference group or the individual ordinal
ranking within the group, exerts a differential effect across SWB levels. Such divergence is
assessed by means of the tradeoff ratio between household income and the relative income
variables. The results show that a low rank and falling below the average income in one s
group are significant determinants of low SWB but largely irrelevant when accounting for
high SWB. The fact that conditionally unhappy individuals are more sensitive to comparisons,
particularly if they are unfavorable, is consistent with earlier laboratory studies in
the field of psychology. This paper challenges the common assumption made by economists to date that
income comparisons are similarly important in different segments of the subjective wellbeing
(SWB) distribution. The results, based on the 2000 2007 waves of the German
SOEP and on a Generalized Ordered Probit for panel data, show that relative income, as
measured either by the mean income of the reference group or the individual ordinal
ranking within the group, exerts a differential effect across SWB levels. Such divergence is
assessed by means of the tradeoff ratio between household income and the relative income
variables. The results show that a low rank and falling below the average income in one s
group are significant determinants of low SWB but largely irrelevant when accounting for
high SWB. The fact that conditionally unhappy individuals are more sensitive to comparisons,
particularly if they are unfavorable, is consistent with earlier laboratory studies in
the field of psychology.
Are Relative-Income Effects Constant across the Well-being Distribution?,
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
1389-4978Palabras Clave
Subjective well-being Comparison income Income rank Generalized ordered response modelSubjective well-being Comparison income Income rank Generalized ordered response model