Publication | Open Access
Well-being is more than happiness and life satisfaction: a multidimensional analysis of 21 countries
756
Citations
34
References
2020
Year
Recent trends in well‑being measurement have raised scientific rigor and shifted focus from single metrics such as happiness or GDP to multidimensional approaches. Using 2006 and 2012 European Social Survey data from 21 countries (≈40 000 respondents per year), the authors constructed a multidimensional psychological well‑being (MPWB) index. The ten‑dimension MPWB produces a standardized composite score for cross‑country comparison and shows that single‑dimension metrics can mask important policy levers, making both the composite and individual dimensions valuable for designing well‑being interventions.
Abstract Background Recent trends on measurement of well-being have elevated the scientific standards and rigor associated with approaches for national and international comparisons of well-being. One major theme in this has been the shift toward multidimensional approaches over reliance on traditional metrics such as single measures (e.g. happiness, life satisfaction) or economic proxies (e.g. GDP). Methods To produce a cohesive, multidimensional measure of well-being useful for providing meaningful insights for policy, we use data from 2006 and 2012 from the European Social Survey (ESS) to analyze well-being for 21 countries, involving approximately 40,000 individuals for each year. We refer collectively to the items used in the survey as multidimensional psychological well-being (MPWB). Results The ten dimensions assessed are used to compute a single value standardized to the population, which supports broad assessment and comparison. It also increases the possibility of exploring individual dimensions of well-being useful for targeting interventions. Insights demonstrate what may be masked when limiting to single dimensions, which can create a failure to identify levers for policy interventions. Conclusions We conclude that both the composite score and individual dimensions from this approach constitute valuable levels of analyses for exploring appropriate policies to protect and improve well-being.
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