A survey of people living in small, rural communities around the world suggests income not key to happiness.
The findings run counter to global polls that typically show that people in industrialized countries where incomes are relatively high report greater levels of satisfaction with life than those in low-income countries.
For the study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers surveyed close to 3,000 people in 19 small communities around the world. Some of the communities self-identify as Indigenous, and all depend on nature for their livelihoods.
The team discovered that even though the respondents have very little money (just 64% of the households surveyed had any cash income), many are leading happy, satisfying lives, at levels of happiness comparable to those in high-income countries. This is the case despite the fact that many of these communities have histories of marginalization and oppression.
“This is good news for the environment because the results provide strong evidence that resource-intensive economic growth is not required to achieve high levels of subjective well-being,” says lead author Eric Galbraith, a professor in the earth and planetary sciences at McGill University and a researcher at the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology of the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB).
Happiness doesn’t depend on wealth
The researchers asked survey participants, in countries including Fiji, Zimbabwe, and China, to name just a few, to rate their level of satisfaction with life on a scale of 0–10. The average level of life satisfaction across the communities was close to seven out of 10, and four of the 19 sites scored over eight out of 10 (figures that are comparable to those from other polls for wealthy Scandinavian countries)—although some communities rated their level of life satisfaction as low as five out of 10.
“Our research shows that the strong correlation frequently observed between income and life satisfaction is not universal and proves that wealth—as generated by industrialized economies—is not fundamentally required for humans to lead happy lives,” says senior author Victoria Reyes-Garcia, ICREA researcher at ICTA-UAB.
Measuring national and global levels of life satisfaction is a relatively new area of research, although the results are playing an increasingly important role in setting policy agendas. The first World Happiness Report, with material drawn from 150 mainly industrialized nations, was published as recently as 2012.
“Economic growth is often prescribed as a sure way of increasing the well-being of people in low-income countries, and global surveys in recent decades have supported this strategy by showing that people in high-income countries tend to report higher levels of life satisfaction than those in low-income countries,” says coauthor Christopher Barrington-Leigh, an associate professor at McGill University, in the equity, ethics, and policy department and the Bieler School of Environment.
He suggests, however, that there is a need for caution when it comes to associating well-being with economic growth.
“This strong correlation might suggest that only in rich societies can people be happy. But, because we have only been quantifying the quality of life experience for a few decades, and with a limited set of populations, we need to make sure that we have not been over-generalizing from the patterns we saw at first.”
Satisfying lives
The researchers highlight the fact that, although they now know that people with very little money in nature-based societies often report high levels of life satisfaction, they do not know why.
“Prior work would suggest that family and social support and relationships, as well as spirituality and connections to nature play an important role in this happiness. But it is possible that the important factors differ significantly between societies or, instead, that a small subset of factors dominate everywhere,” says Galbraith.
“I would hope that, by learning more about what makes life satisfying in these diverse communities, it might help many others to lead more satisfying lives while at the same time addressing the sustainability crisis.”
“It has become very clear that we are a very social species, and that the nature of our interactions with other people and living things are enormously powerful determinants of how we see our lives, overall,” says Barrington-Leigh. “Therefore, we might imagine that there are quite different kinds of lives from the ones we pursue now which could also be highly fulfilling.”
Source: McGill University