학술논문

The economic well-being of nations is associated with positive daily situational experiences
Document Type
article
Author
Gwendolyn GardinerDaniel I. LeeErica BaranskiDavid C. FunderMaite BeramendiBrock BastianAljoscha NeubauerDiego CortezEric RothAna TorresDaniela S. ZaniniKristina PetkovaJessica TracyCatherine AmiotMathieu Pelletier-DumasRoberto GonzálezAna RosenbluthSergio SalgadoYanjun GuanYu YangDiego ForeroAndrés CamargoEmmanouil PapastefanakisGeorgios KritsotakisEirini SpyridakiEvangelia FragkiadakiŽeljko JerneićMartina HřebíčkováSylvie GrafPernille StrøbækAnu RealoMaja BeckerChristelle MaisonneuveSofian El-AstalVladimer Lado GamsakhurdiaJohn RauthmannMatthias ZieglerLars PenkeEmma E. BuchtelVictoria Wai-Lan YeungÁgota KunPeter GadaneczZoltán VassMáté SmohaiAnagha LavalekarMeta Zahro AureliaDian KinayungVanessa GaffarGavin SullivanChristopher DayEyal RechterMarco PeruginiGiulio CostantiniAugusto GnisciIda SergiVincenzo Paolo SeneseFrancesca MottolaTatsuya SatoYuki NakataShizuka KawamotoAsuka KomiyaMarwan Al-ZoubiNicholas OwsleyChaning JangGeorgina MburuIrene NginaGirts DimdinsRasa BarkauskieneAlfredas LaurinaviciusMarijana MarkovikjEleonara SerafimovskaKhairul A. MastorElliott KruseNairán Ramírez-EsparzaJaap DenissenMarcel Van AkenRon FischerIke E. OnyishiKalu T. OgbaSiri LeknesVera Waldal HolenIngelin HansenChristian Krog TamnesKaia KlævaRukhsana KausarNashi KhanMuhammad RizwanAgustín EspinosaMaria Cecilia Gastardo-ConacoDiwa Malaya A. QuiñonesPaweł IzdebskiMartyna KotyśkoPiotr SzarotaJoana Henriques-CaladoFlorin Alin SavaOlya LvovaVictoria PogrebitskayaMikhail AllakhverdovSergey ManichevOumar BarrySnežana SmederevacPetar ČolovićDušanka MitrovićMilan OljačaRyan HongPeter HalamaJanek MusekFrancois De KockGyuseog HanEunkook M. SuhSoyeon ChoiDavid Gallardo-PujolLuis OcejaSergio VillarZoltan KekecsNils ArlinghausDaniel P. JohnsonAlice Kathryn O'DonnellClara KulichFabio Lorenzi-CioldiJanina Larissa BühlerMathias AllemandYen-Ping ChangWei-fang LinWatcharaporn BoonyasiriwatS. Adil SaribayOya SomerPelin Karakus AkalinPeter Kakubeire BagumaAlexander VinogradovLarisa ZhuravlovaMark ConnerJason RentfrowAlexa TullettKyle SauerbergerDouglas E. ColmanJoey T. ChengEric StocksHuyen Thi Thu Bui
Source
Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology, Vol 4, Iss , Pp 100088- (2023)
Subject
Positive psychology
Ecological psychology
Economic development
Situational assessment
Socioeconomic status
Culture
Psychology
BF1-990
Language
English
ISSN
2666-6227
88405486
Abstract
People in economically advantaged nations tend to evaluate their life as more positive overall and report greater well-being than people in less advantaged nations. But how does positivity manifest in the daily life experiences of individuals around the world? The present study asked 15,244 college students from 62 nations, in 42 languages, to describe a situation they experienced the previous day using the Riverside Situational Q-sort (RSQ). Using expert ratings, the overall positivity of each situation was calculated for both nations and individuals. The positivity of the average situation in each nation was strongly related to the economic development of the nation as measured by the Human Development Index (HDI). For individuals’ daily experiences, the economic status of their nation also predicted the positivity of their experience, even more than their family socioeconomic status. Further analyses revealed the specific characteristics of the average situations for higher HDI nations that make their experiences more positive. Higher HDI was associated with situational experiences involving humor, socializing with others, and the potential to express emotions and fantasies. Lower HDI was associated with an increase in the presence of threats, blame, and hostility, as well as situational experiences consisting of family, religion, and money. Despite the increase in a few negative situational characteristics in lower HDI countries, the overall average experience still ranged from neutral to slightly positive, rather than negative, suggesting that greater HDI may not necessarily increase positive experiences but rather decrease negative experiences. The results illustrate how national economic status influences the lives of individuals even within a single instance of daily life, with large and powerful consequences when accumulated across individuals within each nation.