LSE - Small Logo
LSE - Small Logo

Blog Admin

April 12th, 2014

However you spend it, money isn’t the key to happiness

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Blog Admin

April 12th, 2014

However you spend it, money isn’t the key to happiness

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Christopher BoyceThe question as to whether more money brings greater happiness comes up time and time again and will no doubt continue to do so. Studies have shown that money matters much less than people assume and some conclude this is because we aren’t spending it right. Christopher Boyce accepts this argument may have some value, but emphasises money is unimportant compared to other factors at raising individual wellbeing.

How important, if at all, is having more money for our happiness and wellbeing? Unsurprisingly this question stimulates a lot of opinion and debate. But are people accurate in their predictions about the benefits of having money?

new study published in the Journal of Positive Psychology highlights that people are often mistaken in how spending our money might benefit our lives. People are prone to forecasting errors – that is, they mistakenly predict future events to be better or worse than they actually turn out to be.

In this latest study the researchers show that people predict that buying material possessions will be a better use of money than spending instead on life experiences. But once the purchases are had, the experience is what’s perceived to have been a better use of money, resulting in higher wellbeing. More or less, this confirms findings from other studies. And so it seems that a focus on having as opposed to being may limit human potential. But what does this new study tell us about the importance of money for both happiness and wellbeing more generally? On the whole money matters much less than people think and has led some to conclude simply that money doesn’t make us happy because we aren’t spending it right.

Credit: Tax Credits (Creative Commons BY)
Credit: Tax Credits (Creative Commons BY)

My own research has also illustrated that we probably don’t spend our money on the things most beneficial for wellbeing. For example, we have shown that spending on psychological therapy would be an extremely cost-effective way of raising wellbeing. But the message from our research is not that we should just spend our money better and that people underestimate the effect of purchasing certain things, as the authors claim in the latest study. Instead, our work highlights just how relatively unimportant money is at raising individual wellbeing compared to other more important things.

More to life than money

How to spend our money is not the only choice we have – we also have choices as to how we should live our lives and whether in fact we should spend so much time and energy pursuing money in the first place. Thus when we are trying to understand the importance of money for wellbeing it is one thing to compare types of spending, but really we should be comparing how important money is in relation to other things.

The reality is that how much someone earns contributes very little to their sense of wellbeing compared with other things such as social relationships, physical and mental health or how a person relates to the world around them. Focusing directly on these factors would probably do much more for our wellbeing rather than how we chose to spend our money.

We have demonstrated that personality change, for example, contributes substantially more to changes in wellbeing than income factors. People who, for example, become more open to new experiences or emotionally more stable, are much more likely to experience larger wellbeing changes than any change to their income.

Being materialistic is well known to be detrimental to an individual’s wellbeing. Those that pursue wealth and possessions consistently report lower wellbeing than those that don’t.

So a better question to address than how we should spend our money is: “Why does more money seem to bring us very little well-being even though we often predict otherwise?”

Money and social standing

One reason is that people don’t care about how much money they have per se, but care more about the social position that their income gives them. But increases in an individual’s income won’t necessarily equate to a growth in social standing. And, while people may think that an income increase will bring greater wellbeing, this may not factor in that everyone else may experience an income increase at the same time.

It’s also been shown that income losses have a much greater impact on wellbeing than equivalent income gains. This suggests that any benefit that accrues from an income rise, whether at the individual or national level, may be completely wiped out by much smaller income losses. The importance of income is therefore not in obtaining it, but avoiding losing it. Only once it’s obtained does income become essential to maintain your current level of wellbeing and this may partly explain why it is believed to be so important for well-being.

The question as to whether more money brings greater happiness comes up time and time again and will no doubt continue to do so. Indeed it is an important question and how we spend our money is of course important – if we have money then of course it makes sense to use it wisely. But it would be a mistake to let the pursuit of money for the sake of happiness distract us away from the things in life that simply matter more.

Featured image credit: Tracey O (Creative Commons BY SA)

Note: This article was originally published on The Conversation and the LSE’s British Politics and Policy blog.

Please read our comments policy before commenting.

Note:  This article gives the views of the author, and not the position of USApp– American Politics and Policy, nor of the London School of Economics.

Shortened URL for this post: http://bit.ly/1kBFouZ

About the author

Christopher Boyce

Christopher Boyce – University of Stirling
Dr Christopher Boyce is currently a Research Fellow at Stirling Management School at the University of Stirling. He also holds an Honarary position as a Research Associate in the School of Psychological Sciences at the University of Manchester.

About the author

Blog Admin

Posted In: Christopher Boyce | Democracy and culture | Economy

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

LSE Review of Books Visit our sister blog: British Politics and Policy at LSE

RSS Latest LSE Events podcasts