nep-hap New Economics Papers
on Economics of Happiness
Issue of 2024‒04‒15
two papers chosen by



  1. Mapping well-being in France By Fabrice Murtin; Milenko Fadic
  2. Do Religious People Cope Better in a Crisis? Evidence from the UK Pandemic Lockdowns By Iyer, S.; Larcom, S.; She, P-W.

  1. By: Fabrice Murtin; Milenko Fadic
    Abstract: This paper provides two innovative measures of well-being for French communes, namely a well-being aggregate index and an index of multi-dimensional poverty. These measures provide an unprecedented view of well-being at the local level by using 7 of the 11 key dimensions of the OECD Better Life Initiative (income, unemployment, housing, education, civic engagement, health and environmental quality). The results show that joint deprivation in at least five dimensions of well-being is starkly concentrated among 316 communes, representing as many as 5.2 million inhabitants (7.7% of the French population).
    Keywords: poverty, spatial inequality, well-being
    JEL: I14 I31 I32
    Date: 2024–04–04
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:oec:wiseaa:23-en&r=hap
  2. By: Iyer, S.; Larcom, S.; She, P-W.
    Abstract: We measure whether religious people in the UK cope better during a large negative shock - the nationwide pandemic lockdowns. We use data from the Understanding Society longitudinal dataset, including self-reports on religion and religiosity taken before the pandemic, and mental health data on unhappiness and depression, collected both before and during the lockdown periods. We find evidence that religious people coped better during the lockdowns. In terms of magnitude, we found that religious people (in that it makes a difference to their life) were around one-fifth less likely to suffer an increase in unhappiness or depression. Our results for those who belong to a religion (regardless if it makes a difference to their life) were higher in magnitude, but lower in significance. We found little difference in coping across religions; with the results for Christians, Muslims and Hindus all being broadly similar. However, we did find some difference within Christian denominations, with ‘Christian Other’ (those belonging to mainly Protestant churches other than the Church of England) coping relatively worse among those who belong to a religion. We also found that when places of worship were closed, religious Muslims and Catholics suffered disproportionately - the two religious groups from our study that normally require weekly communal attendance from their followers.
    JEL: Z12 Z13 I10 I18
    Date: 2024–01–30
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cam:camdae:2403&r=hap

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