Testing the Easterlin hypothesis with panel data: the dynamic relationship between life satisfaction and economic growth in Germany and in the UK

Publication type

Research Paper

Series Number

554

Series

SOEP Papers on Multidisciplinary Panel Data Research

Authors

Publication date

June 1, 2013

Summary:

Recent studies focused on testing the Easterlin hypothesis (happiness and national income correlate in the cross-section but not over time) on a global level. We make a case for testing the Easterlin hypothesis at the country level where individual panel data allow exploiting important methodological advantages. Novelties of our test of the Easterlin hypothesis are a) long-term panel data and estimation with individual fixed effects, b) regional GDP per capita with a higher variation than national figures, c) accounting for potentially biased clustered standard errors when the number of clusters is small. Using long-term panel data for Germany and the United Kingdom, we do not find robust evidence for a relationship between GDP per capita and life satisfaction in either country (controlling for a variety of variables). Together with the evidence from previous research, we now count three countries for which Easterlin’s happiness-income hypothesis cannot be rejected: the United States, Germany, and the United Kingdom.

Subjects

Link

http://ideas.repec.org/p/diw/diwsop/diw_sp554.html

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