Measures of well-being ¨è

198-2-895
The second conclusion challenges the received notions of mankind¡¯s moods. A tenet of political science is that happiness levels rise with wealth and then plateau, usually when a country¡¯s national income per head reaches around $25,000 a year. ¡°The richer a country gets,¡± argued Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett in ¡°The Spirit Level¡±, an influential book of 2009, ¡°the less getting still richer adds to the population¡¯s happiness.¡± Many on the left have concluded that pursuing further economic growth is pointless. Even right-wing politicians such as Britain¡¯s prime minister, David Cameron, and the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, have set up projects to study ¡°gross national happiness¡±.
But the Ipsos study shows the highest levels of self-reported happiness not in rich countries, as one would expect, but in poor and middle-income ones, notably Indonesia, India and Mexico. In rich countries, happiness scores range from above-average󈟬% of Australians and Americans say they are very happy—to far below the mean. The figures for Italy and Spain were 13% and 11% (Greece was not in the sample). Most Europeans are gloomier than the world average. So levels of income are, if anything, inversely related to felicity. Perceived happiness depends on a lot more than material welfare.

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notions °³³ä. tenet Îçëù(±³ÀÇ), ½ÅÁ¶. political science Á¤Ä¡ÇÐ.
plateau ÇнÀ °í¿ø(Á¤Ã¼»óÅÂ), ÍÔê«(°í¿ø).
Many on the left ÁÂÆÄ ÂÊÀÇ ¸¹Àº »ç¶÷µé. mean Æò±Õ, ñéêÈ(ÁßÀ§).
gloom ¿ì¿ïÇÑ, ¾ÏÈæ. inversely ¹Ýºñ·ÊÇÏ¿©. felicity ò¸ÜØ(Áöº¹).
Perceived ò±ÊÆ(Áö°¢)µÇ´Â. material welfare ¹°ÁúÀû º¹Áö.
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