Money, Well-Being, and Loss Aversion

Author:

Boyce Christopher J.12,Wood Alex M.1,Banks James34,Clark Andrew E.56,Brown Gordon D. A.7

Affiliation:

1. Behavioural Science Centre, Stirling Management School, University of Stirling

2. School of Psychological Sciences, University of Manchester

3. Institute for Fiscal Studies, University of Manchester

4. Department of Economics, University of Manchester

5. Paris School of Economics

6. CNRS, France

7. Department of Psychology, University of Warwick

Abstract

Higher income is associated with greater well-being, but do income gains and losses affect well-being differently? Loss aversion, whereby losses loom larger than gains, is typically examined in relation to decisions about anticipated outcomes. Here, using subjective-well-being data from Germany ( N = 28,723) and the United Kingdom ( N = 20,570), we found that losses in income have a larger effect on well-being than equivalent income gains and that this effect is not explained by diminishing marginal benefits of income to well-being. Our findings show that loss aversion applies to experienced losses, challenging suggestions that loss aversion is only an affective-forecasting error. By failing to account for loss aversion, longitudinal studies of the relationship between income and well-being may have overestimated the positive effect of income on well-being. Moreover, societal well-being might best be served by small and stable income increases, even if such stability impairs long-term income growth.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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