A Measure of Well-being Efficiency Based on the World Happiness Report
Francesco Sarracino and
Kelsey J. OConnor ()
Authors registered in the RePEc Author Service: Kelsey J. O'Connor
International Productivity Monitor, 2022, vol. 43, 10-40
Abstract:
We estimate a measure of well-being efficiency that assesses countries’ ability to transform inputs into subjective well-being (Cantril ladder). We use the six inputs (real GDP per capita, healthy life expectancy, social support, freedom of choice, absence of corruption, and generosity) identified in the World Happiness Reports and apply Data Envelopment Analysis to a sample of 126 countries. Efficiency scores reveal that high ranking subjective well-being countries, such as the Nordic countries, are not strictly the most efficient ones. Also, the scores are uncorrelated with a traditional (total factor) measure of economic efficiency. This suggests that the implicit assumption that economic efficiency promotes wellbeing is not supported. Subjective well-being efficiency can be improved by changing the amount (scale) or composition of inputs and their use (technical efficiency). For instance, countries with lower unemployment, and greater healthy life expectancy and optimism are more efficient.
Keywords: Productivity; Well-Being (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)
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Working Paper: A Measure of Well-Being Efficiency Based on the World Happiness Report (2022) 
Working Paper: A measure of well-being efficiency based on the World Happiness Report (2022) 
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