The Mid-Life Dip in Well-Being: a Critique

被引:0
|
作者
David G. Blanchflower
Carol L. Graham
机构
[1] Dartmouth College,Bruce V. Rauner Professor of Economics, Department of Economics
[2] University of Glasgow,Adam Smith Business School
[3] GLO,undefined
[4] Bloomberg and NBER,undefined
[5] Leo Pasvolsky Senior Fellow The Brookings Institution,undefined
[6] College Park Professor,undefined
[7] University of Maryland,undefined
[8] Senior Scientist,undefined
[9] Gallup,undefined
来源
Social Indicators Research | 2022年 / 161卷
关键词
Well-being; Age; Happiness;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A number of studies—including our own—find a mid-life dip in well-being. Yet several papers in the psychology literature claim that the evidence of a U-shape is "overblown" and if there is such a thing that any such decline is "trivial". Others have claimed that the evidence of a U-shape "is not as robust and generalizable as is often assumed," or simply "wrong." We identify 409 studies, mostly published in peer reviewed journals that find U-shapes that these researchers apparently were unaware of. We use data for Europe from the Eurobarometer Surveys (EB), 1980–2019; the Gallup World Poll (GWP), 2005–2019 and the UK's Annual Population Survey, 2016–2019 and the Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey of August 2021, to examine U-shapes in age in well-being. We find remarkably strong and consistent evidence across countries of statistically significant and non-trivial U-shapes in age with and without socio-economic controls. We show that studies cited by psychologists claiming there are no U-shapes are in error; we reexamine their data and find differently. The effects of the mid-life dip we find are comparable to major life events such as losing a spouse or becoming unemployed. This decline is comparable to half of the unprecedented fall in well-being observed in the UK in 2020 and 2021, during the Covid19 pandemic and lockdown, which is hardly “inconsequential” as claimed.
引用
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页码:287 / 344
页数:57
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