Abstract

Subjective well-being has captured the interest of scientists and policy-makers as a way of knowing how individuals and groups evaluate and experience their lives: that is, their sense of meaning, their satisfaction with life, and their everyday moods. One of the more striking findings in this literature is a strong association between age and subjective well-being: in Western countries it has a U-shaped association over the lifespan. Despite many efforts, the reason for the curve is largely unexplained, for example, by traditional demographic variables. In this study we examined twelve social and psychological variables that could account for the U-shaped curve. In an Internet sample of 3,294 adults ranging in age from 40 to 69 we observed the expected steep increase in a measure of subjective well-being, the Cantril Ladder. Regression analyses demonstrated that the social-psychological variables explained about two-thirds of the curve and accounting for them significantly flattened the U-shape. Perceived stress, distress-depression, an open perspective about the future, wisdom, satisfaction with social relationships, and family strain were measures that had pronounced impacts on reducing the curve. These findings advance our understanding of why subjective well-being is associated with age and point the way to future studies.

Highlights

  • Subjective well-being (SWB) is a major concept of interest for augmenting other economic and social measures of welfare [1, 2]; it includes the concepts of perceived meaning in life, evaluations of satisfaction with life, and everyday moods

  • The shape and level of the curve is slightly different than that reported in 2010 for the ages studied, but the increase in later age is consistent with the prior literature

  • A previously unexplained “paradoxical” increase in SWB with older age observed in many studies was substantially accounted for by age-related patterns of social relationships, lower

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Summary

Introduction

Subjective well-being (SWB) is a major concept of interest for augmenting other economic and social measures of welfare [1, 2]; it includes the concepts of perceived meaning in life, evaluations of satisfaction with life, and everyday moods. The current study tested twelve psychological and social variables that we posit could account for the age-Ladder relationship (hereafter referred to as explanatory variables) They were culled from a review of the literature on SWB and aging [2, 4, 10,11,12]. The findings show that a number of the psychological and social explanatory variables partially examined here accounted for the U-shaped association between age and subjective well-being To our knowledge, these are the first results to empirically account for the curve, with the caveats that the curve was only partially eliminated and that the cross-section nature of the study precludes causal conclusions. The results provide support for the theories from which these variables were derived and suggest more extensive, prospective studies of their association with subjective well-being

Materials and methods
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Objective
New York
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