Economics of happiness: Income and non-income determinants of happiness among Malaysian Chinese

Happiness has become a pivotal element in our daily life as everybody wants to be happy. However, the existing happiness literature has shown that there is a happiness gap among the Malaysian Chinese. The Malaysian Chinese, who are performing well economically, are performing poorly in their happine...

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Main Author: Tang, Boon Guan
Format: Thesis
Language:eng
eng
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://etd.uum.edu.my/10338/1/permission%20to%20deposit-grant%20the%20permission-901184.pdf
https://etd.uum.edu.my/10338/2/s901184_01.pdf
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spelling my-uum-etd.103382023-03-01T04:19:31Z Economics of happiness: Income and non-income determinants of happiness among Malaysian Chinese 2021 Tang, Boon Guan Lim, Hock Eam Yuan, Zhen School of Economics, Finance & Banking School of Economics, Finance and Banking HB Economic Theory Happiness has become a pivotal element in our daily life as everybody wants to be happy. However, the existing happiness literature has shown that there is a happiness gap among the Malaysian Chinese. The Malaysian Chinese, who are performing well economically, are performing poorly in their happiness scores and religiosity. The potential explanations for this happiness gap could be the omission of the essential expenditures and the interactive effect of religiosity. Thus, the present study attempts to investigate the income and non-income determinants that influence happiness among the Malaysian Chinese, including the essential expenditures and the interactive effect of religiosity. This study consists of 1319 respondents that had been collected through a two-stage stratified random and quota sampling method. The ordered logit regression model estimation results have shown that the income-related variables, which affect Malaysian Chinese happiness, are actual income, relative income, discrepancy income, and essential expenditures. The essential expenditures especially, has a significant negative influence on happiness among the Malaysian Chinese. The offsetting effects of the increase in both income and essential expenditures on happiness could be an alternative explanation of the Easterlin income-happiness paradox in the case of Malaysian Chinese. Among the non-income variables, religiosity has significant positive effects on happiness, which include the dimensions of practice, belief, precept, and giving. Moreover, the other significance non-income (socio-demographic) variables are gender, marital status, educational level, employment status, health status, positive and negative emotions, and types of religion. Finally, on the interaction of the common religiosity of all religions to income and non-income variables, the empirical results have indicated that different dimensions of religiosity would have various significant interactive influences. The present study has identified new significant variables that affect Malaysian Chinese happiness. It would offer an alternative explanation for the Easterlin income-happiness paradox. 2021 Thesis https://etd.uum.edu.my/10338/ https://etd.uum.edu.my/10338/1/permission%20to%20deposit-grant%20the%20permission-901184.pdf text eng staffonly https://etd.uum.edu.my/10338/2/s901184_01.pdf text eng public other doctoral Universiti Utara Malaysia
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
collection UUM ETD
language eng
eng
advisor Lim, Hock Eam
Yuan, Zhen
topic HB Economic Theory
spellingShingle HB Economic Theory
Tang, Boon Guan
Economics of happiness: Income and non-income determinants of happiness among Malaysian Chinese
description Happiness has become a pivotal element in our daily life as everybody wants to be happy. However, the existing happiness literature has shown that there is a happiness gap among the Malaysian Chinese. The Malaysian Chinese, who are performing well economically, are performing poorly in their happiness scores and religiosity. The potential explanations for this happiness gap could be the omission of the essential expenditures and the interactive effect of religiosity. Thus, the present study attempts to investigate the income and non-income determinants that influence happiness among the Malaysian Chinese, including the essential expenditures and the interactive effect of religiosity. This study consists of 1319 respondents that had been collected through a two-stage stratified random and quota sampling method. The ordered logit regression model estimation results have shown that the income-related variables, which affect Malaysian Chinese happiness, are actual income, relative income, discrepancy income, and essential expenditures. The essential expenditures especially, has a significant negative influence on happiness among the Malaysian Chinese. The offsetting effects of the increase in both income and essential expenditures on happiness could be an alternative explanation of the Easterlin income-happiness paradox in the case of Malaysian Chinese. Among the non-income variables, religiosity has significant positive effects on happiness, which include the dimensions of practice, belief, precept, and giving. Moreover, the other significance non-income (socio-demographic) variables are gender, marital status, educational level, employment status, health status, positive and negative emotions, and types of religion. Finally, on the interaction of the common religiosity of all religions to income and non-income variables, the empirical results have indicated that different dimensions of religiosity would have various significant interactive influences. The present study has identified new significant variables that affect Malaysian Chinese happiness. It would offer an alternative explanation for the Easterlin income-happiness paradox.
format Thesis
qualification_name other
qualification_level Doctorate
author Tang, Boon Guan
author_facet Tang, Boon Guan
author_sort Tang, Boon Guan
title Economics of happiness: Income and non-income determinants of happiness among Malaysian Chinese
title_short Economics of happiness: Income and non-income determinants of happiness among Malaysian Chinese
title_full Economics of happiness: Income and non-income determinants of happiness among Malaysian Chinese
title_fullStr Economics of happiness: Income and non-income determinants of happiness among Malaysian Chinese
title_full_unstemmed Economics of happiness: Income and non-income determinants of happiness among Malaysian Chinese
title_sort economics of happiness: income and non-income determinants of happiness among malaysian chinese
granting_institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
granting_department School of Economics, Finance & Banking
publishDate 2021
url https://etd.uum.edu.my/10338/1/permission%20to%20deposit-grant%20the%20permission-901184.pdf
https://etd.uum.edu.my/10338/2/s901184_01.pdf
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