New Economics Papers
on Economics of Happiness
Issue of 2014‒04‒05
two papers chosen by



  1. Happiness - before and after the Kids By Mikko Myrskylä; Rachel Margolis
  2. Sociability, Altruism and Subjective Well-Being By Leonardo Becchetti; Nazaria Solferino; M. Elisabetta Tessitore

  1. By: Mikko Myrskylä; Rachel Margolis
    Abstract: Understanding how having children influences the parents’ subjective well-being (“happiness”) has great potential to explain fertility behavior. We study parental happiness trajectories before and after the birth of a child using large British and German longitudinal data sets. We account for unobserved parental characteristics using fixed-effects models and study how sociodemographic factors modify the parental happiness trajectories. Consistent with existing work, we find that happiness increases in the years around the birth of the first child, then decreases to before-child levels. Moreover, happiness increases before birth, suggesting that the trajectories may capture not only the effect of the birth but also the broader process of childbearing which may include partnership formation and quality. Sociodemographic factors strongly modify this pattern. Those who have children at older ages or have more education have a particularly positive happiness response to a first birth, and although the first two children increase happiness, the third does not. The results are similar in Britain and Germany and suggest that up to two, children increase happiness, and mostly among those who postpone childbearing. This pattern is consistent with the fertility behavior emerging during the second demographic transition and provides new insights into low and late fertility.
    Keywords: Fertility, well-being, life course, parenthood
    Date: 2014
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:diw:diwsop:diw_sp642&r=hap
  2. By: Leonardo Becchetti (University of Rome "Tor Vergata"); Nazaria Solferino (University of Rome "Tor Vergata"); M. Elisabetta Tessitore (University of Rome "Tor Vergata")
    Abstract: The choice between performing a task today or procrastinating it until tomorrow or later is the building block of any economic action. In our paper we aim to enrich the theoretical literature on procrastination by outlining conditions for bad and good procrastination and looking at the special cases of pathological procrastination, the curse of perfec- tionism and productive procrastination. We discuss how our theoreti- cal framework may be applied to explain different types of (education, investment and production) microeconomic decisions and which policy measures can be taken to avoid bad procrastination.
    Keywords: Time-Inconsistent Preferences, Optimal Effort, Procras- tination, Intertemporal Choice
    JEL: A12 D03 D11 D74 D91
    Date: 2014–03
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ent:wpaper:wp53&r=hap

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