Can’t buy me meaning? Money cuts a quicker path to happiness

Can’t buy me meaning? Money cuts a quicker path to happiness

A new study asks a more nuanced question: Does meaning predict happiness, regardless of wealth? The results suggest that meaning is less important to happiness for wealthy people. More importantly, meaning may be extra important for people without much money. The search for meaning is woven tightly into the pursuit of a life well lived.

Defining Meaning and Happiness

Researchers and philosophers differentiate between two types of psychological wellbeing: eudaimonic (the meaningful, purposeful, or significant) and hedonic (the pleasurable or enjoyable)

How money fits in

Prior research establishes that, on average, wealthy people experience happier and more meaningful lives than their lower-income counterparts

Confounding Factors

Age and religiosity are correlated with meaning and income, making them potential confounding factors

Study 1: The Americans

Researchers measured meaning by averaging two criteria that assess one’s sense of life purpose: how much respondents like what they do each day, and how much they are motivated to achieve their goals

What this does and does not mean

The data from more than 500,000 people suggest that meaning is less important to happiness for wealthy people.

Study 2: The World

This time the researchers used the Gallup World Poll, which is an extensively validated survey administered in local languages across 123 countries

Study 3: Different questions

Catapano and her team recruited participants through a popular French TV program and asked them well-validated, direct questions.

Source

Get in