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Erschienen in: Social Indicators Research 1/2011

01.08.2011

Economic Migration and Happiness: Comparing Immigrants’ and Natives’ Happiness Gains From Income

verfasst von: David Bartram

Erschienen in: Social Indicators Research | Ausgabe 1/2011

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Abstract

Research on happiness casts doubt on the notion that increases in income generally bring greater happiness. This finding can be taken to imply that economic migration might fail to result in increased happiness for the migrants: migration as a means of increasing one’s income might be no more effective in raising happiness than other means of increasing one’s income. This implication is counterintuitive: it suggests that migrants are mistaken in believing that economic migration is a path to improving one’s well-being, at least to the extent that well-being means (or includes) happiness. This paper considers a scenario in which it is less likely that migrants are simply mistaken in this regard. The finding that increased incomes do not lead to greater happiness is an average (non)effect—and migrants might be exceptional in this regard, gaining happiness from increased incomes to a greater extent than most people. The analysis here, using data from the World Values Survey, finds that the association between income and happiness is indeed stronger for immigrants in the USA than for natives—but even for immigrants that association is still relatively weak. The discussion then considers this finding in light of the fact that immigrants also report lower levels of happiness than natives after controlling for other variables.

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Fußnoten
1
The Mexican Migration Project overcomes this type of limitation to a degree, though it does not contain questions/variables related to happiness.
 
2
As with many studies of this type, Ball and Chernova’s analysis is based on cross-sectional data. Clark and Oswald (2002) assert that the structure of equations based on panel data is similar to those derived using cross-sectional data, suggesting that “omitted dispositions” is not a problem for the latter.
 
3
Migrants might well believe that migration is a sacrifice worth making for the sake of their children—but that belief might be inaccurate in relation to actual consequences for the second generation, particularly if the children themselves show evidence of downward mobility as per the segmented assimilation thesis (Portes and Zhou 1993). Beliefs about remittances might be similar in this respect: Borraz et al. (2007) found that emigrants’ families back home were less happy than non-migrant families despite the greater income brought by remittances.
 
4
When one considers that particularly unhappy migrants might be more inclined to return to their country of origin (or to move onto another destination), the size of this negative coefficient might be even larger if migrants who had already left were included in the sample. As noted above, national constraints on data collection inhibit measurement of immigration-related processes like this.
 
5
The age variable was statistically significant in Ball and Chernova’s models—presumably because their sample was much larger (>20,000). Even with the larger sample, sex was not significant in their models.
 
6
This statement assumes that the direction of causality, if any, runs from income to life satisfaction. The reverse is plausible, as often noted: more satisfied people might be able to earn higher incomes.
 
7
There is, unavoidably, a degree of imprecision in designating (all) countries in Asia as poorer than the US: that designation would not be correct for Japan, in particular. In addition, “other” would likely include Australia and New Zealand—though it would also include immigrants from the Caribbean.
 
8
One might wonder whether immigrants and natives would tend to answer the life satisfaction question differently perhaps for cultural reasons. But data from this type of question are regularly used for international comparisons of happiness, and while there are indeed cultural differences (on which see Suh et al. 1998) there is no apparent reason to believe that any “bias” arising from cultural factors would work solely in one direction, given that immigrants to the US come from a very wide range of countries.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Economic Migration and Happiness: Comparing Immigrants’ and Natives’ Happiness Gains From Income
verfasst von
David Bartram
Publikationsdatum
01.08.2011
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Social Indicators Research / Ausgabe 1/2011
Print ISSN: 0303-8300
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-0921
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-010-9696-2

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