Well-Being and the Democratic State: How the Public Sector Promotes Human Happiness | Academic Article individual record
abstract

2018, Springer Nature B.V. While a growing literature within the study of subjective well-being demonstrates the impact of socio-political factors on subjective well-being, scholars have conspicuously failed to consider the role of the size and scope of government as determinants of well-being. In this study, we examine the size of the public sector as a determinant of cross-national variation in life satisfaction across the industrial democracies. At the individual-level, we find that public employees are happier and exhibit greater life satisfaction than otherwise similar others. At the aggregate level, the data strongly suggest that the subjective well-being varies positively with the size of the public sector. The implications for the study of life satisfaction are discussed.

publication outlet

Social Indicators Research

author list (cited authors)
Pacek, A., Radcliff, B., & Brockway, M.
publication date
2019
publisher
Springer Nature Publisher
keywords
  • 4407 Policy And Administration
  • 35 Commerce, Management, Tourism And Services
  • 44 Human Society
  • 4408 Political Science
altmetric score

7.2

citation count

15