Money and Happiness

xoxoxoBruce • Mar 10, 2016 12:52 am
Yet another study correlating money and happiness.

In brief

•Recent surveys of hundreds of thousands of people in over 150 countries show that richer people report being more satisfied with their lives overall, but that the richer you become, the more money you need to increase your satisfaction further. This is because people spend money on the most important things first. Someone earning $100,000 per year is only a little more satisfied than someone earning $50,000. The best available study found that each doubling of your income would increase your life satisfaction by about 0.5 points on a scale of 1 to 10.
I would assume someone making $50 grand, except in crazy expensive places like NYC, or if you have expensive habits like drugs or shopping, should be able to cover the basic needs that cause extreme stress if you can't. So from there on it's wants not needs.


•If you look at how ‘happy’ people say they are right now the relationship is weaker. One large study found people in countries with average incomes of $32,000 were only 10% happier with their lives than those in countries with average incomes of just $2,000; another within the US could find no effect above a $40,000 income for a single person.
Well duh, apples and oranges. If you're peers, friends, and neighbors are all making $2,000 like you, you're going to be more content than if they're all making ten times more than you.

•Moreover, some and maybe even most of this relationship is not causal. For example, healthier people will be both happier and capable of earning more. This means the effect of gaining extra money on your happiness is weaker than the above correlations suggest. Unfortunately, how much of the above relationships are caused by money making people happier is still not known with confidence.
•Once you get to an individual income of around $40,000, other factors, such as health, relationships and a sense of purpose, seem far more important than income. So our recommendation is not to focus on earning more (insofar as you want to become happy anyway).


lot's more.
Gravdigr • Mar 10, 2016 3:05 pm
Lots of people will tell you that money can't buy happiness, well, I say to them (and I've said it here before):

Money might not buy happiness, but, it can buy happierness.:D

And, it can buy me a boat:

[YOUTUBEWIDE]mQPjKSVe1tQ[/YOUTUBEWIDE]
Happy Monkey • Mar 10, 2016 3:42 pm
Gravdigr;955206 wrote:
Lots of people will tell you that money can't buy happiness, well, I say to them (and I've said it here before):

Money might not buy happiness, but, it can buy happierness.:D
And before that, it can buy your way out of various sources of sadness.
footfootfoot • Mar 10, 2016 4:10 pm
My friend's grandfather said, "Money doesn't buy happiness, but it pays for the misery I enjoy."
BigV • Mar 10, 2016 4:12 pm
cool vid

I think they got that huge backlit splash on "... boat." by tipping the prop out of the water, revving the motor, and dropping the spinning prop down into the water, sssSSSSPPPPPPPPHHHHHHHHHH! you can see the top of the engine cover appears to be tilted forward during the second splash at the end of the song, and at the very end you can see the engine cover with the engine at rest in a much more level orientation.
xoxoxoBruce • Mar 11, 2016 12:32 am
Gravdigr;955206 wrote:
And, it can buy me a boat:

A hole in the water to throw money in.

Image

No, you can only rent it. ;)
Gravdigr • Mar 11, 2016 1:01 pm
Gravdigr;955206 wrote:
And, it can buy me a boat:


xoxoxoBruce;955238 wrote:
A hole in the water to throw money in.


B.O.A.T.

Bust Out Another Thousand
xoxoxoBruce • Mar 11, 2016 1:31 pm
Now you've got it. :thumb:
lumberjim • Mar 11, 2016 4:01 pm
Life is a shit sandwich.

The more bread you have, the less shit you need to eat.
Happy Monkey • Mar 11, 2016 5:02 pm
lumberjim;955304 wrote:
Life is a shit sandwich.

The more bread you have, the less shit you need to eat.

... per bite.