Science
Money impacts happiness more than previously thought, study suggests – Big Think
A new study casts doubt on previous research showing that emotional well-being plateaus at an income of $75,000 per year.

- A new study examined how income affects experienced and evaluative well-being, which are two measures researchers commonly use to evaluate happiness.
- The results showed that both evaluative and experienced well-being tend to increase alongside income.
- Still, the results don’t suggest you should assign more importance to money, or tie your ideas of personal success to it.
Can money buy happiness?
In 2010, a Princeton University study added nuance to that adage by showing that money does indeed affect…
Continue Reading
-
General24 hours ago
Trump’s tariffs: a bad idea executed badly
-
Business4 hours ago
Soaring one day, plunging the next. Why is the ASX 200 on a rollercoaster?
-
Business11 hours ago
How I’d build a $100,000 ASX portfolio from scratch
-
Noosa News6 hours ago
Brisbane man Benjamin Holt speaks out about teen who allegedly organised Airbnb party that led to his house being trashed