Monday, November 23, 2020

We investigate how a person’s happiness is affected by the incomes of her neighbours and coworkers: Workplace rank matters much more than neighbourhood rank

The effects of neighbourhood and workplace income comparisons on subjective wellbeing. Shakked Noy, Isabelle Sin. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, November 23 2020. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2020.11.008

Rolf Degen's take: https://twitter.com/DegenRolf/status/1330877507931938818

Abstract: We investigate how a person’s happiness is affected by the incomes of her neighbours and coworkers. Using an unprecedentedly rich combination of administrative and survey data, we establish two central results. First, a person’s happiness is sensitive to her ordinal rank within her peer income distribution: people are happier the higher their income rank. Second, workplace rank matters much more than neighbourhood rank. We confirm that our results reflect a causal effect of peer income by implementing sensitivity analyses, identifying off changes in peer income over time for immobile people, exploiting plausibly exogenous moves between workplaces triggered by mass layoffs, and testing for the effects of unobservable group-level confounders.

Keywords: Subjective wellbeingIncome comparisonsRelative income

JEL D63I31J31


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