Abstract
The subjective well-being of very wealthy persons was compared with that of a control group who lived in the same geographical area. One hundred persons from Forbes list of wealthiest Americans were queried, as well as 100 control persons selected from telephone directories. The 49 wealthy respondents reported average levels of subjective well-being which were higher than the 62 control group respondents and any subgroup of respondents in a national sample. However, there were unhappy wealthy people and the average level of this group was only modestly higher than for other groups. None of the respondents believed that money is a major source of happiness. When the major sources of happiness mentioned by the two groups were coded for Maslow's needs, it was found that the wealthy group more often mentioned self-esteem and self-actualization and less frequently mentioned physiological and security needs.
Similar content being viewed by others
Bibliography
AndrewsF. M., and S. B.Withey: 1976, Social Indicators of Well-Being: America's Perception of Life Quality (Plenum, New York).
CampbellA.: 1981, The Sense of Well-Being in America: Recent Patterns and Trends (McGraw-Hill, New York).
CampbellA., P. E.Converse, and W. L.Rodgers: 1976, The Quality of American Life (Russell Sage, New York).
CsikszentmihalyiM.: 1975, Beyond Boredom and Anxiety (Jossey-Bass, San Francisco).
DienerE.: 1984, ‘Subjective Well-Being’, Psychological Bulletin 95, pp. 542–575.
Diener, E., R. J. Larsen, S. Levine, and R. A. Emmons: 1985, ‘Intensity and frequency: Dimensions underlying positive and negative affect’, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 48, in press.
Diener, E., E. Sandvik and R. J. Larsen: 1985, ‘Age and sex affects for emotional intensity’, Developmental Psychology, in press.
EasterlinR. A.: 1974, ‘Does economic growth improve the human lot? Some empirical evidence’, in P. A.David and W. M.Reder (eds.), Nations and households in economic growth (Academic Press, New York), pp. 89–125.
FordyceM. W.: 1977, ‘The happiness measures: A sixty second index of emotional well-being and mental health’, unpublished paper, Edison Community College, Fort Myers, Florida.
FreedmanJ.: 1978, Happy People: What Happiness Is, Who Has It, and Why. (Harcourt, New York).
Larsen, R. J. and E. Diener: 1984, ‘A multitrait, multimethod examination of affect structure: Hedonic level and emotional intensity’, Personality and Individual Differences, in press.
Larsen, R. J., E. Diener and R. A. Emmons: 1983, ‘Validity and meaning of measures of subjective well-being’, paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
LarsonR.: 1978, ‘Thirty years of research on the subjective well-being of older Americans’, Journal of Gerontology 33, pp. 109–125.
MaslowA. H.: 1954, Motivation and Personality (Harper & Row, New York).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Diener, E., Horwitz, J. & Emmons, R.A. Happiness of the very wealthy. Social Indicators Research 16, 263–274 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00415126
Received:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00415126