Abstract

Numerous studies agree that income inequality, rather than absolute income, is an important predictor of happiness. However, its specific role has been controversial. We argue that income inequality and happiness should exhibit an inverted U-shaped relationship due to the dynamic competing process between two effects: when income inequality is relatively low, the signal effect will be the dominating factor, in which individuals feel happy because they consider income inequality as a signal of social mobility and expect upward mobility; however, if income inequality level increases beyond a critical point, the jealousy effect will become the dominating factor, in which individuals tend to be unhappy because they are disillusioned about the prospect of upward mobility and jealous of their wealthier peers. This hypothesis is tested in a longitudinal dataset on the United States and a cross-national dataset on several European countries. In both datasets, the Gini coefficient (a common index of a society’s income inequality) and its quadratic term were significant predictors of personal happiness. Further examinations of the quadratic relationships showed that the signal effect was only presented in the European data, while the jealousy effect was presented in both datasets. These findings shed new light on our understanding of the relationship between income inequality and personal happiness.

Highlights

  • “The lord of a state or a family, concerns himself not with scarcity but rather with uneven distribution

  • We performed a logarithmic transformation of household income, and the transformed income was significantly correlated with happiness (r = −0.403, p = 0.046)

  • A quadratic relationship between income inequality and happiness was found for yearly variations of happiness within the same country and across European countries for the same year

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Summary

Introduction

“The lord of a state or a family, concerns himself not with scarcity but rather with uneven distribution. We propose that both effects manifest in the presence of an income gap, and push the income inequalityhappiness relationship into opposite directions Their relative strength depends on how large the income inequality is. When it is in the low range, it is easier for individuals to climb the social ladder, and the signal effect will be the main determinant in encouraging individuals to be more hopeful about their future. At this stage, a positive relationship is expected between income inequality and happiness, because a higher income gap means higher possible status. Individuals become less hopeful regarding upward mobility and, as the jealousy effect becomes the dominating factor, happiness decreases, while the income gap increases

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