Money Really Does Lead to a More Satisfying Life
New research
suggests that more money really does lead to a more satisfying life.
Surveys of thousands of Swedish lottery winners have provided persuasive
evidence of this truth.
Lottery
winners said they were substantially more satisfied with their lives
than lottery losers. And those who won prizes worth hundreds of
thousands of dollars reported being more satisfied than winners of mere
tens of thousands.
These effects are
remarkably durable. They were still evident up to two decades after a
big win. (The researchers lacked the data to trace out even longer-term
consequences.)
The findings appear in a research report, “Long-Run Effects of Lottery Wealth on Psychological Well-Being,” that has generated a lot of buzz among economists over the summer. The working paper, by Erik Lindqvist from the Stockholm School of Economics, Robert Ostling from Stockholm University and David Cesarini from New York University.
It is certain to feed a long-running debate about the role that personal finances play in shaping subjective well-being.
Many previous analyses — including several that I have conducted with my partner, Betsey Stevenson, a fellow University of Michigan economist — have documented
that people with higher incomes tend to report higher levels of life
satisfaction. The relationship between income and satisfaction is remarkably similar across dozens of countries, suggesting that findings about Sweden likely apply to the United States.
Those earlier studies merely documented a correlation. What’s new here is the evidence that higher income is causing higher life satisfaction.
This
research is able to reliably disentangle causation and correlation
because a lottery effectively provides a randomized control trial. As in
the trial of a new drug, those who received the treatment — in this
case a big dose of money, courtesy of a lottery ticket — were compared
both with those who received a smaller dose by winning a minor prize and
with statistically matched individuals of the same age and sex who
entered the lottery and didn’t win.
In a drug trial — as in a lottery — whether you get the big dose, a
smaller dose or no dose is determined purely by chance. Scientists find
this sort of trial to be persuasive because the random assignment
ensures that lottery winnings are the only factor driving systematic
differences between those who receive the treatment and those in the
control group. It therefore isolates the effect of extra money in
driving satisfaction.
The authors persuaded the Swedish statistical authorities to try to
survey every winner of three of the country’s major lotteries over more
than a decade, and then used government records to track other aspects
of the winners’ lives. The researchers examined the same indicators for
Swedes who had entered but lost the same lotteries, or who won minor
prizes.
Their surveys took several approaches to
measuring subjective well-being. The measure most robustly linked to
income asks people how satisfied they are with their lives as a whole.
By contrast, responses to a question asking about happiness showed less
of a connection to lottery winnings, and these effects could not be
reliably distinguished from the effects of chance. Social scientists
widely view questions about life satisfaction as eliciting a broad-based
evaluation of one’s life while questions about happiness yield
responses more related to current moods or feelings.
A further set of questions probed the mental health of respondents, finding that greater income had no effect, although in related work,
the same authors find that lottery winners are prescribed fewer mental
health drugs. I interpret this as suggestive but not conclusive evidence
that wealth improves one’s mental health.
Other studies by these authors —
sometimes with other scholars — have tracked the economic lives of these
lottery winners to further explore the consequences of wealth. Contrary
to popular stereotypes, those who win hundreds of thousands of dollars
don’t blow most of their winnings at once. Instead, they slowly spend
their newfound wealth over many years. Many don’t quit their jobs, but
they do tend to work a bit less and retire a bit earlier.
Surprisingly, the increase in wealth caused by winning the lottery has few effects
on the physical health of the winners or their children. It seems
possible that family wealth might have quite different effects in a less
egalitarian society, like the United States.
These results provide strong evidence in support of the standard
economic view that money increases well-being, albeit not in an entirely
uniform manner. It runs counter to the view championed by many
psychologists that people largely adapt to their circumstances —
including their financial situation.
In an email, Mr. Cesarini characterized that perspective as the
“widespread misperception that science has proved that winning the
lottery often makes people miserable.”
That misperception most likely comes from an earlier generation of lottery studies. Perhaps the most famous
of them is a 1978 study, “Lottery Winners and Accident Victims: Is
Happiness Relative?” With the benefit of hindsight, that study appears
to illustrate changing standards of empirical research more than any
truths about well-being.
It compared
the subjective well-being of 22 winners of the Illinois State Lottery
with a control group of 22 people. The lottery winners rated themselves
as happier after winning their prizes, but because the sample size was
so small, the researchers concluded that this might reflect the
influence of chance and failed to note that these data were consistent
with the idea that the lottery winners were substantially happier. The
problem with small samples is that it’s hard to be sure of anything.
That same study also surveyed 29 paraplegic accident victims, finding them to be less happy than other people. Yet many popular accounts of this study describe it as if it supported the opposite proposition, that people adapt to personal tragedies.
I’ve
seen this pattern before, as a counterintuitive finding captures the
public’s imagination, taking on a life of its own. In time, the facts
become too interesting to check.
But
eventually, science corrects itself. After 40 years, three determined
economists, thousands of lottery winners and reams of detailed data have
revealed a more reliable but less romantic truth: Money really does
help people lead a more satisfying life.
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