February 18, 2006

Who's Happy?

Lots of us are according to the latest Pew Study Are We Happy Yet

One third of us are very happy. Half of us are pretty happy. 15% are not too happy and 1% don't have a clue.

And it's been the same since they started keeping records, way back in 1972.


Much of the research into the field of happiness -- to say nothing of simple common sense - suggests that at the level of the individual, happiness is heavily influenced by life events (Did you get the big promotion? Have a fight with your boyfriend?) as well as by psychological traits (self-esteem, optimism, a sense of belonging, the capacity to love, etc.). The Pew survey did not look at life events or psychological characteristics. We only looked at happiness by demographic and behavioral traits. But through this admittedly limited prism, we found some fascinating correlations.

Several of them stand out: Married people are happier than unmarrieds. People who worship frequently are happier than those who don't. Republicans are happier than Democrats. Rich people are happier than poor people. Whites and Hispanics are happier than blacks. Sunbelt residents are happier than those who live in the rest of the country.


We also found some interesting non-correlations. People who have children are no happier than those who don't, after controlling for marital status. Retirees are no happier than workers. Pet owners are no happier than those without pets

Posted by Jill Fallon at February 18, 2006 9:30 PM | Permalink
Comments

How valuable it was to find your research. It was surprising to see some of the correlations. I really do believe that the greatest gift you can give another is your own happiness You've given me a snapshot of different groups that are interesting to ponder. Thanks.
Rhonda Hull

Posted by: Rhonda Hull at February 22, 2006 6:17 PM

How valuable it was to find your research. It was surprising to see some of the correlations. I really do believe that the greatest gift you can give another is your own happiness You've given me a snapshot of different groups that are interesting to ponder. Thanks.
Rhonda Hull

Posted by: Rhonda Hull at February 22, 2006 6:17 PM