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Will a Bigger Salary Make You Happier?
By Rachel
Zupek, CareerBuilder.com
Money doesn't equal happiness
While most
people assume that a higher income will make them
happier, a 2006 study by Princeton University
researchers found the link between money and happiness
is mostly an illusion.
"The belief
that high income is associated with good mood is
widespread but mostly illusory," the researchers wrote.
"People with above-average income are relatively
satisfied with their lives but are barely happier than
others in moment-to-moment experience, tend to be more
tense and do not spend more time in particularly
enjoyable activities."
Two Princeton
professors -- economist Alan B. Krueger and psychologist
and Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman -- joined forces with
researchers at three other universities on the study.
The goal was to formulate different methods of measuring
the well-being of individuals and of society; they ended
up with deeper insight to income and happiness.
The
researchers developed a tool to measure people's quality
of daily life known as the Day Reconstruction Method (DRM),
according to a press release. DRM creates an "enjoyment
scale" that makes people jot down the previous day's
activities in diary form and assess their feelings about
the experiences.
The survey
showed that respondents who earned less than $20,000 a
year reported only spending 12 percent more of their
time in a bad mood than those who earned more than
$100,000.
"If people
have high income, they think they should be satisfied
and reflect that in their answers," Krueger says.
"Income, however, matters very little for
moment-to-moment experience."
Mo' money, mo' problems?
Most of us
believe more money equals more happiness, but we forget
a few things. First of all, no matter how much money you
make, you can always make more. There's no proven amount
you can earn to declare yourself "happy" -- you'll end
up chasing a higher salary year after year.
Even if you do
reach a higher income level, earning more money doesn't
necessarily mean more smiles -- in fact, it probably
means more stress. We overlook the fact that earning
more typically means working more. Working more means
less time with family, friends, and for yourself. If you
could earn double your income by working double the
hours, would you?
Higher-income
people tend to be tenser and devote more time to
"obligatory" activities like work, shopping and
childcare, according to a nationwide Bureau of Labor
statistics survey on how people with varying income
spend their time.
Men earning
more than $100,000 per year spend 19.9 percent of their
time on activities such as socializing or watching
television, compared to 34.7 percent for men making less
than $20,000, according to government statistics. Women
making more than $100,000 spend 19.6 percent of their
time on passive leisure, compared with 33.5 percent of
those earning less than $20,000.
"In some
cases, this focusing illusion may lead to a
misallocation of time, from accepting lengthy commutes
(which are among the worst moments of the day) to
sacrificing time spent socializing (which are among the
best moments of the day)," the study says.
Essentially,
money is not all that matters in a job or in life. So
stop trying to keep pace with the Joneses -- it's what
money can't buy that brings happiness.
(The above article has been taken from
Careerbuilder.com)
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