Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7244340 | Journal of Economic Psychology | 2016 | 42 Pages |
Abstract
Working in non-profit organizations has been shown to be good for individuals' satisfaction with their jobs despite lower incomes. This paper explores the impact of non-profit work on life satisfaction more general for the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and finds a significant positive impact the size about more than a fourth of that of getting widowed. This effect is quite uniform across the subjective well-being distribution, and thus exists also for those who are already happy. Shadow prices peg this effect at around 22,000Â GBP p.a., the average amount of equivalent net household income in the sample analyzed (which is roughly 27,000Â GBP p.a.). The positive effect can be explained by third sector workers enjoying their day-to-day activities more, being (affectively) happier and feeling that they are playing a useful role in their lives.
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Authors
Martin Binder,