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Laura Rowley Money & Happiness

Laura Rowley, Money & Happiness

Quick Study: Money and Happiness Under the Microscope

by Laura Rowley

Excellent (375 Ratings)
4.034672/5
Posted on Wednesday, April 30, 2008, 12:00AM

University of Southern California professor Richard Easterlin, the father of research on well-being, began studying happiness in the late 1960s, when happiness wasn't cool. I've interviewed him a number of times over the years.

Early in his career, Easterlin examined data on economic growth and reported happiness in a range of countries, and discovered that big jumps in growth in nations such as the United States and Japan were accompanied by declines, or only marginal increases, in reported happiness. This became known as the "Easterlin Paradox."

A Paradox Revisited

Recently, Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers, two economists at the University of Pennsylvania, reexamined the data, and suggest that economic growth does indeed correlate with happiness, according to a New York Times report. They found that people in countries with higher incomes report higher life satisfaction.

National economic growth and happiness is one thing, personal wealth and happiness is something else entirely. So amid this debate, I think it's worth re-examining what studies say about money and individual well-being. Here are my conclusions:

1. Money buys moments of pleasure -- but they don't last long.

The problem is the more we have the more we want. In a separate study, Easterlin analyzed the results of a survey that asked adults about their material aspirations and achievements. People were presented with a list of items -- a lot of money, a home, a swimming pool, a vacation home, cars, travel abroad, etc. -- and asked which things fit their definition of "the good life." Then, researchers asked them to go down the list and name all the things they had. The study was conducted twice -- once in 1978 and again in 1994.

Because the two surveys were conducted 16 years apart, Easterlin was able to analyze whether people's aspirations shift as they age and their circumstances change. He found that as consumers moved through each stage of the life cycle -- early, midlife, and older years -- they generally acquired more of the goods on the list. But as they accumulated more, their aspirations for material goods also rose in proportion to the amount of things they owned.

In other words, the study offered scientific proof of the old saying "the more you have the more you want." Researchers call it the "hedonic treadmill." It means -- we quickly adapt to the improvement in our circumstances, and then seek more.

2. We constantly want more because we're bad at predicting what will make us happy.

In 2002, Daniel Kahneman of Princeton won the Nobel Prize in economics for his work in this area. A fundamental rule of economics says that people are motivated by self-interest: They know what they want, can predict the most desirable outcome, and choose the best course of action to maximize their welfare. But Kahneman and a burgeoning group of behavioral economists have found that's not always true: We don't always act rationally.

One reason is the way our brains recall experience. Kahneman had people record how they were feeling about an event in real time, and then interviewed them after the fact. He discovered their accounts didn't match. Our brains pay attention to the peak and the end of an experience, and tend to forget what happens in between.

If we only remember the peak and end of an experience, we can make poor decisions. For instance, a salesperson will remember the rush of closing a big deal, but might not remember what it cost in time away from family, lost sleep, high stress, or poor health -- so he'll repeat the behavior. A shopper will remember the thrill of buying a Louis Vuitton suitcase, but she might not remember how long or hard she had to work to pay for it (or worse, pay for the bag and the finance charges on a credit card) -- and dig herself ever-deeper in the hole. If we aren't consciously in touch with what we really value, we can make career and money decisions that make us unhappy.

3. Money might buy interesting experiences, but researchers say cheap thrills create happiness.

I recently interviewed Sonja Lyubomirsky, a psychologist at the University of California, Riverside, and author of "The How of Happiness." Her book examines research suggesting that 40 percent of our happiness is inherited, and 10 to 15 percent is based on life circumstances like money, health, where you live, whether you're married or have kids, and so on.

But the rest of well-being -- a good 45 to 50 percent -- comes from your choices: Should I work extra hours for more money, or spend that time with my friends? Should I watch television, or go running or biking? Should I go to the mall, or spend time volunteering? Should I browse through the catalogs in my mailbox, or spend that half-hour meditating on what I'm grateful for?

As you can probably guess, researchers have found it's the latter choice in each pair that promotes happiness. Everyday decisions have a huge impact on your happiness, and many of those happiness-inducing choices -- socializing, volunteering, exercising, meditating -- don't have to cost anything at all.

4. People chase money because they think it's something else.

We tend to place a lot of symbolic meaning on money. We think money is security, power, freedom, happiness, or love. Money can certainly buy us a measure of freedom or security, but money itself is none of those things. If we think money is security, we'll never amass enough to feel secure. If we think it's freedom, we'll never earn enough to be free. The problem is, instead of consciously setting and pursuing goals to create a life in which we feel free or secure, we shortcut to money as a proxy.

Tim Kasser, associate psychology professor at Knox College, and Richard Ryan of the University of Rochester have found that people who make the pursuit of money a significant goal score lower for mental health. They suffer a greater risk of depression; have more anxiety and lower self-esteem; experience more physical, behavioral, and relationship problems; and score lower on indicators testing for self-actualization and vitality (or feeling alive and vigorous). The findings were similar across different countries, income levels, and age groups.

Once we remove the emotional baggage, we can acknowledge that money is just one component to achieve our goals instead of an all-encompassing solution. If freedom is a value, we have to ask which people, qualities, and experiences have made us feel most free in the past: Where do I need to live to be around those people? What should I do for my work, and how should I spend my leisure time? How much money do I need to help me create a life with those qualities and experiences? Being as specific as possible about how to manifest these qualities in our lives will keep us from running on the hedonic treadmill.

Feel Blessed, Not Happy

Finally, there's the issue of what people mean when they tell a pollster they're "happy."

In one of my favorite studies, researchers had subjects go into a phone booth to make a call. The researchers put a quarter in the coin return of the telephone; some people find it, others don't. Immediately afterward, the researchers asked them to rate their overall satisfaction -- and it's the people who found the quarter who rate life the best.

The study underscores the importance of separating temporary euphoria from genuine happiness. I subscribe to Aristotle's notion of eudaimonia -- which is translated from the Greek as "happiness," but is probably closer to the word "flourishing." And long-term flourishing requires discipline, persistence, hard work, faith, and, most important, pursuing goals that are close to your heart and based on your personal gifts.

This isn't the smiley-face, instant-gratification kind of "happiness" that popular culture promotes. As Thomas Carlyle once said, "There is something higher than happiness, and that is blessedness."

Extra! See Laura Rowley quiz the Today Show's live audience and viewers at home on recession and personal finance issues.

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110 Comments

Showing comments 6-35 of 110<< PreviousNext >>
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  • there - Sunday, May 4, 2008, 12:44PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    What a bunch of baloney. If you have figured out your life, you don't need these articles that skirt around the edges and analyze fragments of what happiness is. There are valid fragments of truth in this article, in my opinion. But come-on, do you really need Laura Rowley to convey to you what the abc's of your own life are? Anybody who doesn't know what makes them happy by the age of 30 is not going to be helped by these prognosticators. You have to think for yourself on this most important of issues, your own happiness. The fragments may help, they may hurt, but you have to find the handle on your own life YOURSELF.

  • Stephen - Sunday, May 4, 2008, 9:28AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I'm familiar with the research cited, including the phenomenon of hyperbolic discounting, as well as the references to the hedonic treadmill and Aristotelian "flourishing". I think from here it is a short leap for Laura Rowley to begin discussing the aretaic turn and perhaps the notion of akrasia. Robert H. Frank of Cornell U also presents the idea that attainment of so-called positional goods cause a "smart for one, dumb for all" arms race (Falling Behind, 2007) which leave no one better off. Meanwhile, the attempts to fix the credit crisis via Fed rate cuts and lending activities (repurchase agreements) and rescue financial institutions and households with tax dollars could be the equivalent of a series of colonoscopies: make the diagnostic experience not too harsh and perhaps Kahneman's research might be useful in obliterating the memory of bad financing decisions if only for the sake of righting the risk-return profiles in the interest of avoiding debt-deflation and the inadequacies of the Fisher cure... SW in Toronto

  • Glenn P - Sunday, May 4, 2008, 12:36AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    You brought up many good points. Personally, I think money contributes to overall happiness in a person life but not in the long run. Having too much money is not going to create satisfaction, instead it's those things around us that gives overall desired happiness in our lives generally speaking like our families, friends, and how we choose to run our social lives.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, May 3, 2008, 10:45PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    A lot of good points, but conclusions are too general. Cerntain rules are applicable only to different groups of people. It is like arguing with in-laws. Better state assumptions before drawing the conclusions.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, May 3, 2008, 8:46PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    People don't really understand the meaning of having money until they don't have a job or make enuf to meet ends, and survival is their only concern.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, May 3, 2008, 8:13PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I'm never going to earn a lot of money, but what I have now makes me feel secure: paying bills without worrying about how I'll pay the next one; I can eat well and provide myself good shelter, etc. But wait...I just realized interacting and having a good time with my co-workers is pretty cool; making my customers happy is very fulfilling; enjoying a quiet time at home is WONDERFUL! None of that takes any money...I guess I'll be OK.

  • JPEG - Saturday, May 3, 2008, 6:11PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    I'm a material girl in a material world. Now that's phat!

  • anna - Saturday, May 3, 2008, 4:55PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Making and having money has been a pleasure and adds to life experiences and yes, I think brings happiness. The unhappiness with money is associated with the hassel to protect what you have. When you know there are systems in place to take you wealth away then it become tedious.

  • Bill - Saturday, May 3, 2008, 8:46AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    It is an interesting survey of what constitutes happiness for some people. Obviously this is a more complicated subject than can be handled in a short article, but it offers insight and directions for exploration.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, May 3, 2008, 1:52AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    some people feel good when they are productive. people get high from accomplishing in work etc. Author is too onesided and seems to suggest people cannot be happy if they are work oriented. I do believe that food feeling comes from feeling blessed...money, beauty, intelligent, nice home and family.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 11:35PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I think our perception of how much we have is linked to how we instintively compare ourselves to others. If a poor person moved into a middle class neighborhood, they would probably feel pretty happy, at first. As time went on, they would start comparing themselves to their middle class neighbors and possibly not be as happy if they didn't feel like they weren't keeping up with them. They would forget that just a few years earlier, they were much poorer and would have loved to even have the chance to live in a middle class neighborhood.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 11:19PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I think it depends on how materialistic a person is. There are people with little money who still have to have the latest stuff and they'll go into debt to get it. Or there are wealthy people who want to have the latest stuff too. But in their case if it's cheap stuff, they can afford it. If it's expensive stuff, they'll go into debt too...Me personally, I'd be happy with $5,000 more a month. I'd be happy with a nice house. I have no desire to have an expensive car or all the latest gadgets or else I'd have those things now. Once I got a nice house, I wouldn't need a bigger one because it's just more work and more money that I wouldn't see the purpose of spending....Any extra money over the $5,000, I would use to give myself a cushion if I was out of work or use it to pursue a hobby as an investor or save for retirement. I could see myself buying a vacation home with it but it's not something I would go into debt to accomplish because I have to have a vacation home. So having more money isn't urgent for my happiness but it would give me some flexibility and create more opportunities.

  • Brian - Friday, May 2, 2008, 10:08PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I always thought that if I made 10 k a month I'd be happy. Not true. I got there and now it's 20k. When I get there it'll be 40. In fact it already is my goal to make as much in a month as I used to make in a year (40k). The more you have the more you want. Human nature? Probably. I'm euphoruric after I close a big sale for about a day. Then I need the next. It never ends. I need to renew my faith to find true happiness and spend more time with family. Though I will admit, I am more satisfied than I was when I lived paycheck to paycheck. So money has helped create a feeling of stability, and power in my life. When I meet someone who tries to make me feel inferior, deep down I know that theres a 98% chance that Im making more that they are It's a good feeling. I know it's selfish, but I'm just being honest. When I focus on faith, helping others and giving to the church that is when I truely feel happy.

  • Warren - Friday, May 2, 2008, 8:25PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Valuable, down to earth advice. I try to accomplish something (regardless of how small) each day. I find the sense of accomplishment is a real and lasting value. Vary your activities, mixing those you enjoy with those you may dislike (but most be addressed). Set a time limit to periodically work on such things you would otherwise put off. I find I can work on just about anything if I set a time limit of say 1/2 hour at a time.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 5:53PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    The long and the short of it all? If you want to be happy appreciate what you have. If you can't? Take a trip to a Third-World Country. Peace out.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 5:49PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Money is an illusion, a mirage that disappears when we think we have it.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 5:19PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    Well - there's a lot to be angry about these days, so don't be so hard on people if they feel like letting off a little steam. I find it interesting that those who say that happiness is all in how you deal with life and how you feel about it are most usually those who are doing well. Money isn't everything but it's hard to feel really happy if you have to choose between buying gas and buying food. I'm not talking about euphoria here - just everyday feeling pretty good and not worrying about where you're going to get the money to pay the rent, buy gas, eat - you know, all those niggling little things in life. That being said - I agree that having LOTS of money won't necessarily make you ecstatically happy - but having too little has the propensity to make you less happy. You need a balance of enough - and for each person, enough is different.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 5:18PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Is this all she ever thinks about - money and happines. Move on to anther subject please.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 5:14PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Happiness depends on how much control one has over one's life.

  • Heroine Worshipper - Friday, May 2, 2008, 5:11PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    U can summarize Laura Rowley essays without reading them these days. You're right. Money doesn't bring happiness. We get happy by being part of rich men's stories. Look how many of us are praying for Yahoo's CEO to milk just 1 more million from his buyout.

  • Raj - Friday, May 2, 2008, 4:55PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Very well said ! I totally agree with this article..."Money is temporary". It is made out of paper and it can be destroyed... anything temporary cannot possibly be a blessing...I define blessing as an inner satisfaction...not materialistic achievement.We lead our mind to believe that money is everything and in that process, we fail to train it, control it & lead it. Human race is the highest being on this planet in terms of mental development...but ever wonder why ? To earn millions of dollars ?? NO. To achieve a higher state of mind. Not to earn millions and leave it for children, parents, spouse to fight over it. Money cannot buy you true happiness. True happiness only comes from within...not without.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 4:42PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    The conclusions seem to be derived from self justifying conclusions. I think that polling information provides idealism rather than truth. There is no definition of happiness! Is happiness satisfaction, contentment, peace, etc. or just an opinion. There is no so-called happiness without discontent to provide a comparison.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 4:20PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    first rate article from Laura as usual !

  • Camille - Friday, May 2, 2008, 3:34PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    The best of all possible worlds.

  • Usha - Friday, May 2, 2008, 2:51PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I agree with this article.As you acquire, you want to go after more money/material things.Most of your happiness must come from within yourself.

  • CA - Friday, May 2, 2008, 2:33PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I agree with this article, materialism gets you no where. Our consciousness and finding our inner happiness will bring peace of mind

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 2:33PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    This article has it wrong. The key is whether you have control over your daily life so that you can spend your time and money as you choose. You may have more than enough to pay the mortgage and your Visa, but if your work stresses you and you don't have reasonable alternatives to that work, then happiness is going to be on the downslide. Most people in the US are in this bind. To be able to walk away from working would require a lot more money that the overwhelming majority have. So choices need to be made on a daily basis and they are often choices that don't present a palatable alternative.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 2:20PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Nice job Laura. To those (few) who have taken issue with this piece and are complaining about the current national economic picture, you are missing the point. Money and happiness focuses on the micro, not macro, and you control your happiness. As for the recession, personally, I refuse to participate. I will not get too giddy when the economy grows, nor will I get too down when it sttruggles. I make my own bed, and I happy with that.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 2, 2008, 2:07PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    oddly close to Biblical knowledge ;P

  • Drew - Friday, May 2, 2008, 1:58PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    I'm giving this four stars because it is a very good overall perspective. I have one major complaint, though. Some of the points of the article are contradictory to some of the things Laura has said in the past. The main issue that I see is that her comments about money providing security contrast sharply with her comments on the importance of saving in other articles. Money does provide some security and a lot of those "happy" people who go through life unconcerned about the security that money provides are those who end up further in debt than they can handle and without adequate savings. I agree that this can be taken too far the other way as well, but I don't think that the proper balance was addressed. I think that

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