Subjective well-being, societal condition and social policy - The case study of a rich Chinese society

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Abstract

The article looks at whether or not social policy and other societal-condition variables contribute to the subjective well-being of life satisfaction. It firstly argues that social policy needs to pay more attention to the study of subjective well-being. Then, it reviews the literature and finds that people in rich societies generally have higher levels of life satisfaction. But the findings of a social survey on the level of and variance in life satisfaction in a rich Chinese society reveal the contrary. The empirical data reflects a life satisfaction pattern along strong income and class lines. It also confirms that social policy and other societal-condition variables have different degrees of impact on life satisfaction. At last, implications of the findings for social policy are discussed. © Springer 2006.

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Wong, C. K., Wong, K. Y., & Mok, B. H. (2006, September). Subjective well-being, societal condition and social policy - The case study of a rich Chinese society. Social Indicators Research. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-005-1604-9

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