Abstract
National average happiness and the difference in happiness between women and men are positively correlated in European countries.
This study focuses on this cross-country relationship and tests (1) whether, after controlling for socio-economic factors,
the correlation is attributed to their direct relationship, or, alternatively, explained by the sex difference in life expectancy,
and (2) whether the correlation is not only exogenously explained but also endogenously generated by the sex difference in
life expectancy. Performing regression analyses, this study shows that the correlation between happiness and its sex difference
is spurious, and that the sex difference in life expectancy generates this correlation and accounts for about one-third of
the correlation. A decline in happiness influences men’s mortality more than women’s, and widens the life expectancy gap between
women and men. This in turn raises the widowhood ratio among women, lowers women’s average happiness, and reduces the happiness
gap between women and men. The results obtained in this study points to the importance of controlling for the demographic
composition of the population when we use aggregate happiness measures as national happiness indicators.
This study focuses on this cross-country relationship and tests (1) whether, after controlling for socio-economic factors,
the correlation is attributed to their direct relationship, or, alternatively, explained by the sex difference in life expectancy,
and (2) whether the correlation is not only exogenously explained but also endogenously generated by the sex difference in
life expectancy. Performing regression analyses, this study shows that the correlation between happiness and its sex difference
is spurious, and that the sex difference in life expectancy generates this correlation and accounts for about one-third of
the correlation. A decline in happiness influences men’s mortality more than women’s, and widens the life expectancy gap between
women and men. This in turn raises the widowhood ratio among women, lowers women’s average happiness, and reduces the happiness
gap between women and men. The results obtained in this study points to the importance of controlling for the demographic
composition of the population when we use aggregate happiness measures as national happiness indicators.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-13
- DOI 10.1007/s11205-012-0008-x
- Authors
- Junji Kageyama, Department of Economics, Meikai University, Akemi 1, Urayasu, Chiba, 279-8550 Japan
- Journal Social Indicators Research
- Online ISSN 1573-0921
- Print ISSN 0303-8300