Spending Money Can Buy Happiness

Researchers are finding a connection between the spending habits and our happiness.

People who are depressed tend to spend more money buying things for themselves. However, using money to buy things for others, or contributing to a worthy cause, creates more happiness than spending the money on oneself.

A survey of more than six hundred Americans revealed that happiness was not correlated with the amount of income. According to this study, conducted at the University of British Columbia and published in the journal Science, happiness was instead correlated with the amount of money that was spent on others or given away. In a related study the same researchers gave college students either a five or a twenty dollar bill with instructions to spend it that day. Some received instructions to spend it on themselves, while others were told to spend it on others. Those who spent it on others reported more feelings of well-being that night than did the other students. The effect was the same regardless of the amount spent.

On the other hand, when questioned about what would make them happier, spending some money on themselves or on others, the majority of college students questioned believed that spending it on themselves would create more happiness. The facts don’t support this perception. But it might explain the results of another study where researchers created sadness in participants by having them watch a tear jerker. Afterwards they were instructed to go to the mall and buy a bottle of water. According to the results to be published in the journal Psychological Science, compared to folks who had not been saddened, the somewhat depressed participants spent nearly three times as much for their bottle of water. The researchers suggest that the sadness creates a self-focus, and encourages spending behavior that actually is less fulfilling and uplifting.

 

 

Websource and Link:

 

Key to Happiness: Give Away Money

Publication Date:  20 March 2008 02:00 pm ET
Author:  JEANNA BRYNER
Source:  LiveScience
Link:  http://www.livescience.com/health/080320-happiness-money.html

Those incoming federal tax-rebate checks could do more than boost the economy. They might also boost your mood, with one caveat: You must spend the cash on others, not yourself.

New research reveals that when individuals dole out money for gifts for friends or charitable donations, they get a boost in happiness while those who spend on themselves get no such cheery lift.

Scientists have found evidence that income is linked with a person's satisfaction with their life and other measures of happiness, but less is known about the link between how a person spends their money and happiness.

"We wanted to test our theory that how people spend their money is at least as important as how much money they earn," said Elizabeth Dunn, a psychologist at the
University of British Columbia.

The findings, to be detailed in the March 21 issue of the journal Science, come as no surprise to some marketing scientists.

"It doesn't surprise me at all that people find giving money away very rewarding," said Aaron Ahuvia, associate professor of marketing at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, who was not involved in the current study.

The research was funded by a Hampton Research Grant.

Spending habits

Dunn and her colleagues surveyed a nationally representative sample of more than 630 Americans, about evenly split between males and females. Participants indicated their general happiness, annual income and a breakdown of monthly spending, including bills, purchases for themselves and for others, and donations to charity.

Despite the benefits of "prosocial spending" on others, participants spent more than 10 times as much on personal items as they did on charitable options. The researchers note personal purchases included paying bills.

Statistical analyses revealed personal spending had no link with a person's happiness, while spending on others and charity was significantly related to a boost in happiness.

"Regardless of how much income each person made," Dunn said, "those who spent money on others reported greater happiness, while those who spent more on themselves did not."

In a separate study of 13 employees at a Boston-based firm, the researchers found that employees who devoted more of their profit-sharing bonus (which ranged from $3,000 to $8,000) to others reported greater overall happiness than those who spent the windfall on their own needs.

Purchase power

A person apparently doesn't need to drop thousands of dollars on others to reap a gleeful reward.

In another experiment, the researchers gave college students a $5 or $20 bill, asking them to spend the money by that evening. Half the participants were instructed to spend the money on themselves, and the remaining students to spend on others.

Participants who spent the windfall on others - which included toys for siblings and meals eaten with friends - reported feeling happier at the end of the day than those who spent the money on themselves.

If as little as $5 spent on others could produce a surge in happiness on a given day, why don't people make these changes? In another study of more than 100 college students, the researchers found that most thought personal spending would make them happier than prosocial spending.

"Often people, at some implicit level, have this idea that 'buying these things is going to make me happier,'" Ahuvia said. "It does make them momentarily happy," he added, but the warm feelings are short-lived.

Buying buzz

Dunn's team puts forth several possible reasons to explain the charity-happiness link.

"I think it's a lot of factors of prosocial spending that are responsible for these happiness boosts," study researcher of UBC Lara Aknin told LiveScience. "I think it could be that people feel good about themselves when they do it; it could be the fact that it strengthens their social relationships; it could just be the act of spending time with other people."

Perhaps the fuzzy feelings associated with giving last longer than selfish buys. "The happiness 'hit' from giving may last a bit longer if the 'warm glow' from donation lasts longer than the hit from own consumption," said Paul Dolan, an economics professor at the Imperial College London in England. Dolan was not involved in Dunn's study.

Another idea is that charitable spending helps a person express a certain identity.

"People spend a lot of money to make their lives feel meaningful, significant and important," Ahuvia said during a telephone interview. "When you give away money you are making that same kind of purchase, only you are doing it in a more effective way."

He added, "What you're really trying to buy is meaning to life – Giving away money to a cause you believe in is a more effective purchase than buying a T-shirt that says "Save a Whale.'"

 

Sad, Depressed People Likely To Spend More Money

 

Publication Date:  February 8, 2008

Author:  

Source:  dbtechno.com

Link:  http://www.dbtechno.com/curiosity/2008/02/08/sad-depressed-people-likely-to-spend-more-money/

 

A new study done by U.S. researchers has found that people who feel sad are more prone to spending money, compared directly to people who are not sad. If you are depressed, it may be best to avoid the mallsBoston (dbTechno) - A new study done by U.S. researchers has found that people who feel sad are more prone to spending money, compared directly to people who are not sad. If you are depressed, it may be best to avoid the malls.

The way in which the study was handled was very unique. Researchers had people view a sad video clip, or a clip which could cause some sort of sadness or depression, and clips which would have no impact at all.

They were then asked to go and purchase a regular bottle of water at different price points.

The results of the study showed that people who had viewed the sad videos and were in a more depressed state spent 300% more money to buy the same exact product as the people who were not shown the video to spark depression and sadness.

The study has been presented at the Society for Social and Personality Psychology annual meeting. They will been published in the June edition of Psychological Science.

Researchers Cynthia Cryder of Carnegie Mellon University and Jennifer Lerner of
Hardvard University, along with James J. Gross of Stanford Uniiversity and Ronald E. Dahl of the University of Pittsburgh carried out the research.

Researchers stated that since sadness increases self-focus, people are more prone to spend increased amounts on products.