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Do reference values matter? Some notes and extensions on “Income and Happiness across Europe”

Andreas C. Drichoutis, University of Ioannina
Rodolfo M. Nayga Jr., University of Arkansas
Panagiotis Lazaridis, Agricultural University of Athens

Abstract

We add to the analysis conducted in an article in this journal authored by Caporale, Georgellis, Tsitsianis and Yin (2009) (hereafter CGTY) which assessed the relationship between subjective well-being, income and relative income in Europe. Specifically, we note some data management, model/variable specification, and econometric issues that can affect the validity of the findings of CGTY. We then present our own augmented model to test the robustness of the results from the CGTY study. When we try to replicate CGTY’s estimation, we find that the main variable of interest i.e. the reference income variable, reverts sign. We also find several differences in our results, the most important of which is that, in contrast to CGTY’s result that suggests a statistically significant negative reference income effect on life satisfaction, reference income does not really significantly affect life satisfaction in our estimations.

Suggested Citation

Andreas C. Drichoutis, Rodolfo M. Nayga Jr., and Panagiotis Lazaridis. "Do reference values matter? Some notes and extensions on “Income and Happiness across Europe”" Journal of Economic Psychology 31.4 (2010): 479-486.