ED DIENER and ROBERT BISWAS-DIENER
WILL MONEY INCREASE SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING?
A Literature Review and Guide to Needed Research
(Accepted 14 September 2001)
ABSTRACT. Four replicable findings have emerged regarding the relation
between income and subjective well-being (SWB): 1. There are large correlations
between the wealth of nations and the mean reports of SWB in them, 2. There
are mostly small correlations between income and SWB within nations, although
these correlations appear to be larger in poor nations, and the risk of unhappiness
is much higher for poor people, 3. Economic growth in the last decades in most
economically developed societies has been accompanied by little rise in SWB,
and increases in individual income lead to variable outcomes, and 4. People
who prize material goals more than other values tend to be substantially less
happy, unless they are rich. Thus, more money may enhance SWB when it means
avoiding poverty and living in a developed nation, but income appears to increase
SWB little over the long-term when more of it is gained by well-off individuals
whose material desires rise with their incomes. Several major theories are compat-
ible with most existing findings: A. The idea that income enhances SWB only
insofar as it helps people meet their basic needs, and B. The idea that the relation
between income and SWB depends on the amount of material desires that people’s
income allows them to fulfill. We argue that the first explanation is a special case
of the second one. A third explanation is relatively unresearched, the idea that
societal norms for production and consumption are essential to understanding the
SWB-income interface. In addition, it appears high SWB might increase people’s
chances for high income. We review the open issues relating income to SWB, and
describe the research methods needed to provide improved data that will better
illuminate the psychological processes relating money to SWB.
The happy man will need external prosperity.
Aristotle
It is difficult for a man laden with riches to climb the steep path that
leads to bliss.
Islamic saying
People who claim that money can’t buy happiness just don’t know where
to shop.
Anonymous
Social Indicators Research 57: 119–169, 2002.
© 2002 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands.