초록 없음 Slesnick, D. T. (1998). Empirical approaches to the measurement of welfare. Journal of Economic Literature, 36(4), 2108-2165.
카테고리 글 보관함:행복DB
Osterloh, M., Frost, J., &Frey, B. S. (2002). The dynamics of motivation in new organizational forms. International Journal of the Economics of Business, 9(1), 61-77.
This paper discusses the impact of the dynamics of motivation on new organizational forms that are suited to forge value-creating knowledge transfers in teams and between organizational units and functions. Our aim is to develop the management of motivation as a source of distinctive firm competences. We argue that motivation is an endogenous variable and …
Van Praag, B. M. (1991). Ordinal and cardinal utility: an integration of the two dimensions of the welfare concept. Journal of econometrics, 50(1-2), 69-89.
In this paper we distinguish two ‘dimensions’ of the utility concept. The first is the ‘behavioral’ dimension, described by indifference curves in a commodity space. It may be estimated by observing consumer purchase behavior. The second dimension is the ‘welfare’ dimension, i.e., the cardinal utility levels corresponding to indifference curves. The second dimension may be …
Brickman, P., Coates, D., &Janoff-Bulman, R. (1978). Lottery winners and accident victims: Is happiness relative?
Adaptation level theory suggests that both contrast and habituation will operate to prevent the winning of a fortune from elevating happiness as much as might be expected. Contrast with the peak experience of winning should lessen the impact of ordinary pleasures, while habituation should eventually reduce the value of new pleasures made possible by winning. …
Oswald, A. J., &Powdthavee, N. (2008). Does happiness adapt? A longitudinal study of disability with implications for economists and judges.
This paper is an empirical study of partial hedonic adaptation. It provides longitudinal evidence that people who become disabled go on to exhibit considerable recovery in mental well-being. In fixed-effects equations we estimate the degree of hedonic adaptation at — depending on the severity of the disability — approximately 30% to 50%. Our calculations should …
Comim, F. (2005). Capabilities and happiness: Potential synergies. Review of social economy, 63(2), 161-176.
The paper compares two prominent approaches to assessing Human Well-Being, the Capability Approach and the Subjective Well-Being Approach. It investigates the differences and the similarities between these approaches. An argument is made for exploring the potential synergies between them. Finally, the papers of this special edition are briefly introduced. Comim, F. (2005). Capabilities …
Ryan, R. M., &Deci, E. L. (2001). On happiness and human potentials: A review of research on hedonic and eudaimonic well-being. Annual review of psychology, 52(1), 141-166.
Well-being is a complex construct that concerns optimal experience and functioning. Current research on well-being has been derived from two general perspectives: the hedonic approach, which focuses on happiness and defines well-being in terms of pleasure attainment and pain avoidance; and the eudaimonic approach, which focuses on meaning and self-realization and defines well-being in terms …
Easterlin, R. A. (1995). Will raising the incomes of all increase the happiness of all?. Journal of Economic Behavior &Organization, 27(1), 35-47.
Today, as in the past, within a country at a given time those with higher incomes are, on average, happier. However, raising the incomes of all does not increase the happiness of all. This is because the material norms on which judgments of well-being are based increase in the same proportion as the actual income …
Easterlin, R. A. (2001). Income and happiness: Towards a unified theory. The economic journal, 111(473), 465-484.
Material aspirations are initially fairly similar among income groups; consequently more income brings greater happiness. Over the life cycle, however, aspirations grow along with income, and undercut the favourable effect of income growth on happiness, although the cross‐sectional happiness‐income difference persists. People think they were less happy in the past and will be happier in …
Vanberg, V. J. (2005). Market and state: the perspective of constitutional political economy. Journal of Institutional Economics, 1(1), 23-49.
The paper approaches the ‘market versus state’ issue from the perspective of constitutional political economy, a research program that has been advanced as a principal alternative to traditional welfare economics and its perspective on the relation between market and state. Constitutional political economy looks at market and state as different kinds of social arenas in …