Wealth, health, and happiness: An inverse story of the Easterlin Paradox in China
Yangjie Wang, Lianhua Li, Juan Huang, Hongjie Qiang, Shihe Fu, Chih-Wei Tseng, Chih-Wei Tseng, Chih-Wei Tseng, Chih-Wei Tseng, Chih-Wei Tseng

TL;DR
A Chinese environmental policy reduced pollution and increased happiness, even though it lowered local incomes, supporting the idea that clean air boosts well-being more than income.
Contribution
This study provides empirical evidence supporting the environmental explanation of the Easterlin paradox using China's TCZ policy.
Findings
The TCZ policy reduced air pollution in targeted areas.
The policy increased subjective well-being despite lowering local income.
The happiness gain from pollution reduction was valued at ¥59.04 per month.
Abstract
One popular explanation for the Easterlin paradox is that income growth over time is usually accompanied by industrialization and pollution, which cause damage to happiness that cannot be reflected by income change. We examine this explanation by exploring the effects of a large-scale environmental regulation program -the “Two Control Zones (TCZ)” Policy- on subjective well-being (SWB) using data from a series of household surveys in China. We find that, the regulation has successfully mitigated air pollution in the implemented area, although at the cost of local income. Overall, the environmental effect dominates the income effect and TCZ policy increases the SWB of affected people. In particular, despite its negative effect on income, by controlling air pollution, the TCZ policy brought a net increase in residential happiness with a money value of ¥59.04 per month in terms of 2009…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction · China's Socioeconomic Reforms and Governance · Energy, Environment, Economic Growth
