Subjective
Well-Being Around the World: Trends and Predictors Across the Life
Span. Andrew T. Jebb. Psychological Science, February 11, 2020.
https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797619898826
Abstract: Using
representative cross-sections from 166 nations (more than 1.7 million
respondents), we examined differences in three measures of subjective
well-being over the life span. Globally, and in the individual regions
of the world, we found only very small differences in life satisfaction
and negative affect. By contrast, decreases in positive affect were
larger. We then examined four important predictors of subjective
well-being and how their associations changed: marriage, employment,
prosociality, and life meaning. These predictors were typically
associated with higher subjective well-being over the life span in every
world region. Marriage showed only very small associations for the
three outcomes, whereas employment had larger effects that peaked around
age 50 years. Prosociality had practically significant associations
only with positive affect, and life meaning had strong, consistent
associations with all subjective-well-being measures across regions and
ages. These findings enhance our understanding of subjective-well-being
patterns and what matters for subjective well-being across the life
span.
Keywords: subjective well-being, cross-cultural, aging, life meaning, prosocial behavior
Wednesday, February 12, 2020
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