
Happiness Economics
A New Road to Measuring and Comparing Happiness
now publishers Inc
1st Edition
Published on 30. June 2011
Book
Paperback/Softback
114 pages
978-1-60198-438-8 (ISBN)
Description
HAPPINESS ECONOMICS deals with the concept of happiness in economics. Most economists until recently were very suspicious about happiness economics and the common opinion was that happiness is not empirically measurable. Actually there is now a growing body of serious economists who are willing, either reluctantly or wholeheartedly, to include happiness economics as a part of economic science. For a better understanding of happiness economics, the authors examine the viewpoint of mainstream economics in the introduction. Section 2 starts by considering the methods of analysis in happiness economics. Section 3 considers life satisfaction (or happiness), section 4 considers domain satisfactions, section 5 returns to the ordinality-cardinality question, and Section 6 provides the link between domain satisfactions and satisfaction with life as a whole. Section 7 considers the work of the Leyden school that may be seen as a forerunner of modern happiness economics. Section 8 considers the effect of the individual's reference group on her or his happiness. Section 9 examines the influence of past events and the anticipated future on present life satisfaction. Section 10 deals with the effect of climate and more generally of the external environment on satisfaction. Section 11 considers the effect of inequality on individual happiness and considers happiness inequality per se. Section 12 considers how the vignette approach, so popular in marketing, can be applied in happiness economics. Section 13 delineates the significance of happiness economics for normative economics. And Section 14 draws some conclusions and discusses the relevance of the new findings for economic science and the social sciences in general.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Hanover
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 6 mm
Weight
173 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-60198-438-8 (9781601984388)
DOI
10.1561/0700000026
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
1. Introduction. 2. Happiness: Methods of analysis. 3. Life satisfaction, happiness. 4. Domain satisfactions. 5. Cardinal or ordinal? 6. Aggregating domain satisfactions to life satisfaction. 7. Leyden School. 8. Reference groups. 9. Memory, Anticipation and Adaptation. 10. Climate and other external effects. 11. Poverty. 12. Macro-economic determinants of happiness. 13. Inequality. 14. Satisfaction and Vignettes. 15. The significance of Happiness economics for normative economics. 16. Concluding observations, research and applications for the future.