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Well-being (i.e., satisfaction, happiness) is a latent variable, impossible to observe directly. Hence, questionnaires …
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This paper examines multidimensional stochastic dominance when one of the indicators of well-being, such as household size or place of residence, is qualitative. It also uses a test for strict dominance based on the empirical likelihood ratio. Empirical applications are based on the DHS...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013070304
, questions relate to happiness, in others, to individual well-being or satisfaction or to both happiness and satisfaction. In the … wording clearly matters: each subject self-reports her/his own happiness, life satisfaction, and well-being differently. We …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012259820
A growing literature in economics uses subjective well-being data collected in surveys as a proxy for utility. Environmental economists have combined these data with the public goods experienced by respondents using a novel non-market valuation approach: the experienced preference approach. In...
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Using data from the 2011 Census, we estimate quality of life across Australia. With mobile households, utility will be equalised across regions, so those regions with high real incomes must have a compensating low quality of life and vice versa. There are significant differences in quality of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014126955