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Planet Money
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People often say that money can’t buy you happiness. Sometimes, if you ask them to tell you more about it, they’ll mention a famous 2010 study by Nobel Prize winners Daniel Kahneman and Angus Deaton. That study found that higher household income correlates with greater emotional well-being, but only up to around $75,000 a year. After that, more money didn’t seem to matter.
This was a famous study by two famous academics. The result stood for over a decade. And it feels good, right? Maybe the rich aren’t so much happier than anyone else. But researchers have recently done a complete 180 on this idea. In 2021, psychologist Matt Killingsworth found nearly the opposite: That more money does correlate with more happiness. And that the relationship continues well beyond $75,000 per year.
Today on the show: Does more money mean fewer problems? Two researchers with totally different takes come together to hammer out a better understanding of the relationship between money and happiness.
Vocabulaire important
- Ask : Demander
- Buy : Acheter
- Correlates : Est en corrélation
- Emotional : Émotionnel
- Famous : Célèbre
- Fewer: Moins
- Greater : Plus grand
- Hammer out : Élaborer
- Happiness : Bonheur
- Household : Ménage
- Income : Revenu
- Money : Argent
- More : Plus
- Nearly : Presque
- People : Gens
- Researchers : Chercheurs
- Rich : Riche
- Say : Dire
- Study : Étude
- Takes : Prises
- Tell : Dire
- Well-being : Bien-être
- Winners : Gagnants
- Year : Année
