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Social Capital and the Happiness of Nations

The Importance of Trust and Networks for Life Satisfaction in a Cross-National Perspective

by Christian Kroll (Author)
©2008 Thesis 190 Pages

Summary

Why are people in some countries much more satisfied with their lives than people in others? In fact, the national mean life satisfaction scores of 72 countries in this study range from 3.7 to 8.5 on a 10 point scale. This book examines the importance of social capital for societal well-being with highly interesting results. If people in a rich nation increased their civic engagements from one to three memberships on average, the life satisfaction would rise by the same amount as from an increase in GDP per capita of 24,000 US-$. The effects of networks and trust, as well as GDP, unemployment, inflation and income equality are investigated in this study of World Bank and World Values Survey data including 180,000 respondents from Albania to Zimbabwe. The book discusses approaches to life satisfaction from economics, psychology, political science, biology, social anthropology, and sociology, featuring a thorough exploration of social capital theory. Important policy implications result from the findings: Rich nations have to focus on improving interpersonal ties between citizens – a paradigm shift is necessary. Moreover, economically emerging nations need to include social capital more intensively into their policy strategies. Networks of social support must be strengthened today to improve the quality of life around the globe tomorrow.

Details

Pages
190
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631570159
Language
English
Keywords
Internationaler Vergleich Inglehart, Ronald Diener, Ed Soziales Kapital Zufriedenheit Subjective Well-Being Social Trust Easterlin, Richard A. Putnam, Robert D.
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. 189 pp., num. tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Christian Kroll (Author)

The Author: Christian Kroll studied Sociology, Political Science, Psychology and Social Anthropology. He has gained work experience with the UN in New York and the Friedrich-Ebert-Foundation in Madagascar.

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Title: Social Capital and the Happiness of Nations