Abstract

AimsSocial scientists have postulated that the discrepancy between achievements and expectations affects individuals' subjective well-being. Still, little has been done to qualify and quantify such a psychological effect. Our empirical analysis assesses the consequences of positive and negative affective forecasting errors—the difference between realized and expected subjective well-being—on the subsequent level of subjective well-being.DataWe use longitudinal data on a representative sample of 13,431 individuals from the German Socio-Economic Panel. In our sample, 52% of individuals are females, average age is 43 years, average years of education is 11.4 and 27% of our sample lives in East Germany. Subjective well-being (measured by self-reported life satisfaction) is assessed on a 0–10 discrete scale and its sample average is equal to 6.75 points.MethodsWe develop a simple theoretical framework to assess the consequences of positive and negative affective forecasting errors—the difference between realized and expected subjective well-being—on the subsequent level of subjective well-being, properly accounting for the endogenous adjustment of expectations to positive and negative affective forecasting errors, and use it to derive testable predictions. Given the theoretical framework, we estimate two panel-data equations, the first depicting the association between positive and negative affective forecasting errors and the successive level of subjective well-being and the second describing the correlation between subjective well-being expectations for the future and hedonic failures and successes. Our models control for individual fixed effects and a large battery of time-varying demographic characteristics, health and socio-economic status.Results and conclusionsWhile surpassing expectations is uncorrelated with subjective well-being, failing to match expectations is negatively associated with subsequent realizations of subjective well-being. Expectations are positively (negatively) correlated to positive (negative) forecasting errors. We speculate that in the first case the positive adjustment in expectations is strong enough to cancel out the potential positive effects on subjective well-being of beaten expectations, while in the second case it is not, and individuals persistently bear the negative emotional consequences of not achieving expectations.

Highlights

  • The first testable prediction we investigate is whether, even after controlling for individual fixed effects, a number of time-varying characteristics of respondents measured at the time of the expectation formulation, and their evolution up to the realization of life satisfaction, affective forecasting errors are correlated with individual subjective well-being

  • Looking at Column 1 and 3, we find that there is a negative correlation between the level of life satisfaction in the period, St, and failing to meet life satisfaction expectations, while there is no correlation between going beyond one’s expectations and life satisfaction

  • This evidence confirms the asymmetric relationship between affective forecasting errors and life satisfaction highlighted in the model

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Summary

Introduction

They represent a reference according to which individuals evaluate their economic, social and psychological conditions, and make important prospective decisions [1]. By modifying how experiences and subjective conditions are framed and contextualized [7,8,9], expectations may affect subjective well-being judgments. Becoming aware of the discrepancy between what an individual achieved and her initial expectations may change the way in which she interprets life events, evaluates her subjective conditions and revises her life plans [10,11,12,13]. Sen [8,9] argues that the experience of negative conditions may push individuals to adjust their desires to contextual constraints, thereby “deforming” their expectations in response to realized life events

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