Happiness of economists

Feld LP, Necker S, Frey BS (2015)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2015

Journal

Book Volume: 47

Pages Range: 990-1007

Journal Issue: 10

DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2014.985374

Abstract

We study the importance of economists’ professional situation towards their life satisfaction based on a unique survey of mostly academic economists. On average, economists report to be highly happy with life. Satisfaction is positively related to spending more time on doing research. The lack of a tenured position decreases satisfaction. However, the extent to which the uncertainty created by the tenure system affects satisfaction varies with the contract terms. The effect is stronger if the contract expires in the near future or cannot be extended. Publication success has no effect if it is controlled for academic rank and the contract duration. The finding suggests that publications are rather a means to an end, for example, to acquire a tenured position. While the perceived level of external pressure also has no impact, the perceived change of pressure in recent years is positively related to economists’ life satisfaction. An explanation is that economists have accepted a high level of pressure when entering academia but are not willing to cope with the recent increase.

Authors with CRIS profile

Additional Organisation(s)

Involved external institutions

How to cite

APA:

Feld, L.P., Necker, S., & Frey, B.S. (2015). Happiness of economists. Applied economics, 47(10), 990-1007. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00036846.2014.985374

MLA:

Feld, Lars P., Sarah Necker, and Bruno S. Frey. "Happiness of economists." Applied economics 47.10 (2015): 990-1007.

BibTeX: Download