4.1 Article

Income comparison and happiness: The role of fair income distribution

Journal

AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC PAPERS
Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages 41-63

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1467-8454.12193

Keywords

fairness; happiness; inequality; relative income; well-being; JEL codesI31; D31; D63; J31

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71773144]
  2. Humanity and Social Science Foundation of Ministry of Education of China [20YJC790024]
  3. CUFE 2020 Youth Talent Project [QYP2007]
  4. CUFE First Class Discipline Research Project [GMYL2019008]

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The article suggests that people care more about distributional fairness than relative income disparity when comparing incomes. By decomposing individual income into fair and unfair components, the study finds a significant negative relationship between income unfairness and happiness. Additionally, the research highlights a positive relationship between relative income gap and income unfairness, providing a new perspective on the income-happiness paradox.
Relative income gap is one of the most popular approaches for explaining the income-happiness relationship. We argue in this article that when people compare their incomes, they care about distributional fairness more than relative income disparity. It is difficult for us to explain China's income-happiness paradox if we simply compare the income gap and do not explore the income-generation process leading to income inequality. We therefore employ an approach based on a responsibility-sensitive theory of justice that decomposes individual income into fair and unfair components. As a proxy for distributional unfairness, unfair income is considered the main source of unhappiness. Using data from the Chinese Household Income Project survey, we find strong support for the negative relationship between income unfairness and happiness. We also find a significantly positive relationship between the relative income gap and income unfairness, which leads us to consider the income comparison hypothesis as the explanation for the income-happiness paradox in a new light. Sensitivity analyses confirm the robustness of our results.

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