Young people who express more positive emotions tend
to have higher incomes by the time they're 29, a Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences study says.
Happier teens are more likely to get a college degree, get hired and get promoted, a study finds. (Los Angeles Times)
Scientists may have discovered the secret to avoiding
the fiscal cliff: Happiness. Regardless of whether money can buy happiness,
being happy may actually make you more money down the road, new research finds.
People who express more positive emotions as teenagers and greater life
satisfaction as young adults tend to have higher incomes by the time they're
29, according to a study published Monday by the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
The difference was so great that when measuring life
satisfaction on a 5-point scale, a 1-point jump at age 22 made a $2,000
difference in income down the line. Between the gloomiest and the happiest
brackets, that amounts to an $8,000 earnings swing. Drawing on data from the
federally funded Add Health survey of teenagers, the researchers examined the
profiles of more than 10,000 Americans at ages 16, 18 and 22 as well as their
annual incomes at 29. They controlled for a number of factors known to
contribute to financial success, including education level, IQ, height and
self-esteem.
Whether smart or simple-minded, tall or short,
self-confident or insecure, happier people earned bigger paychecks than more
doleful peers: Deeply unhappy teens' future incomes were 30% lower than the
average, while very happy teens earned 10% above average. The research team
took the analysis even further, comparing roughly 3,000 people in sibling pairs
who shared the same parents and, presumably, the same socioeconomic status. The
happier siblings, they found, still did better than their less-happy counterparts.
The findings suggest that interventions to encourage
more positive thinking in kids and teens could greatly improve their future
success, said Michael Norton, a behavioral scientist at Harvard Business School
who was not involved in the study. It might be difficult, but by no means
impossible. Researchers have looked at all sorts of things that make people
happier: Spending money for the sake of others seems to give people a boost, as
does actively being kind to others. "It's kind of like losing weight,"
said Sonja Lyubomirsky, a UC Riverside social psychologist and author of
"The How of Happiness," who was not involved in the study. "If
you're genetically predisposed to not being a happy person, you have to put a
lot of effort into it."
The paper was a longitudinal study and not an
experiment, so it's not entirely clear whether happiness truly caused the
higher earnings. But the study did show that happier teens were more likely to
get a college degree, to get hired and promoted and to be optimistic,
extroverted and less neurotic. "Early happiness probably changes so many
things about your life that even if later in life you're not as happy as you
were, those formative experiences continue to play themselves out," said
Norton, coauthor of the book "Happy Money: The Science of Smarter
Spending."
How much is happiness motivating people to do better
and how much is it simply causing others to give us more opportunities? In
other words, can unhappy people fake it until they make it? "I would bet
they would get some of the benefits," Lyubomirsky said. Still, she said,
most of the value of happiness probably comes from how it affects the person
feeling it, not what others perceive. The study results may even have policy
implications for central banks and political leaders looking to take lagging
American and European economies out of their recent downturns, said lead author
Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, an assistant professor of political economy and
behavioral science at University College London.
Previous research by De Neve's coauthor, economics
professor Andrew Oswald of the University of Warwick in England, has suggested
that low unemployment makes people happier than low inflation. Perhaps
if governments focused on stimulating job growth, even if those measures
boosted inflation, they would lead to greater happiness — and thus more
prosperity overall, De Neve mused. A little individual happiness, spread over
entire populations, could have a massive combined effect, perhaps pulling
depressed economies out of their slumps. "Even the fiscal cliff could be
averted that way," De Neve said. Then he laughed. "I'm just kidding.
Who knows? Maybe."
Source: Chicago Tribune
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