Does Money Lead You To Be Happy?
Many say that cash cannot purchase happiness. However, there was a report from Woodrow Wilson School that shows that it can from around $75,000 a year. The lower a man's wage falls below that figure, the unhappier they feel. Be that as it may, despite what amount over that figure a person makes, they do not say of any further substantial level of happiness.
Before employers hurry to raise everybody's pay to $75,000, the study shows that there are two types of joy. Firstly, there is your changeable, everyday state of mind: whether or not you are happy, stressed or sad.
Secondly, there is a deeper happiness that you feel regarding the way your life goes. Whereas having a wage over the elusive $75,000 cutoff does not appear to affect emotional well-being, it undoubtedly enhances deeper satisfaction.
In the end, the more people make on top of $75,000, the more they feel their life is functioning out all in all. Despite this, it does not make them any more happy in the mornings.
Is Money Our Main Drive To Happiness?
A study, led by economist Angus Deaton and psychologist Daniel Kahneman that has won a Nobel Prize for Economics investigated the responses of 450,000 Americans surveyed by Gallup and Healthways in 2008 and 2009. Participants were asked how they'd felt the day before and whether or not they were living their ideal life. They were also asked about their salary.
The authors found that the majority Americans (85%) despite their salary, felt happy most days. Nearly 400th of participants described feeling stressed (which is not reciprocally exclusive with happiness), and 24-karat gold had sentiments of trouble. The overwhelming majority were also happy with the way their life was going.