Well-being, social capital and public policy: What’s new?
Auteurs: John Helliwell
Aperçu
Résumé (français)
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Résumé (anglais)
This article summarises recent empirical research on the determinants of subjective well-being. Results from national and international samples suggest that measures of social capital, including especially the corollary measures of specific and general trust, have substantial effects on well-being beyond those flowing through economic channels. Cross-national samples (supported by parallel analysis of suicide data) show large well-being effects from the quality of government. finally, using well-being data to estimate the income-equivalents non-financial aspects of the workplace produces numbers so large as to suggest the existence of unexploited opportunities to improve both employee satisfaction and enterprise efficiency.
Détails
Type | Article de journal |
---|---|
Auteur | John Helliwell |
Année de pulication | 2006 |
Titre | Well-being, social capital and public policy: What’s new? |
Volume | 116 |
Nom du Journal | The Economic Journal |
Numéro | 510 |
Pages | C34-C35 |
Langue de publication | Anglais |
- John Helliwell
- John Helliwell
- Well-being, social capital and public policy: What’s new?
- The Economic Journal
- 116
- 2006
- 510
- C34-C35