Friday, September 12, 2014

The Daily Stat from Harvard Business Review

  Daily Stat - Harvard Business Review

September 12, 2014

Your Well-Being Declines When Others Are Unemployed, and Not Because of Empathy


A 1 percentage point increase in local unemployment depresses still-working people's well-being to a degree that's roughly equivalent to a 4% decline in household income, according to John F. Helliwell of the University of British Columbia and Haifang Huang of the University of Alberta, both in Canada. The apparent reason has nothing to do with workers' feeling badly for the unemployed; instead, rising unemployment leads people to fear they'll lose their own jobs, the researchers say.

SOURCE: New Measures of the Costs of Unemployment: Evidence from the Subjective Well-Being of 3.3 Million Americans.


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