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Direct evidence on income comparisons and their welfare effects

[journal article]

Senik, Claudia

Abstract

This paper provides direct evidence that income comparisons exert a significant impact on subjective well-being. It also evaluates the relative importance of different types of benchmarks. Internal comparisons to one's own past living standard outweigh any other comparison benchmarks. Local comparis... view more

This paper provides direct evidence that income comparisons exert a significant impact on subjective well-being. It also evaluates the relative importance of different types of benchmarks. Internal comparisons to one's own past living standard outweigh any other comparison benchmarks. Local comparisons (to one's parents, former colleagues or high-school mates) are more powerful than self-ranking in the social ladder. The impact of comparisons is asymmetric: under-performing one's benchmark always has a greater welfare effect than out-performing it (in absolute value). Comparisons which reduce satisfaction also increase the demand for income redistribution, but there, the relative impact of subjective ranking is preponderant.... view less

Keywords
transition

Classification
Social Psychology
Sociology of Economics

Free Keywords
C25; D31; D63; I31; J31; O57; P3; Z13; Subjective well-being; Income comparisons; Demand for income redistribution; Internal and external benchmarks

Document language
English

Publication Year
2009

Page/Pages
408–424 p.

Journal
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 72 (2009) 1

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2009.04.019

Status
Postprint; peer reviewed

Licence
PEER Licence Agreement (applicable only to documents from PEER project)


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.