What Contributes to Life Satisfaction in Transitional Romania?
Abstract
This paper analyzes life satisfaction in Romania in 2001, 12 years after the collapse of communism and the beginning of the transition into a market economy. Using a survey of 1770 individuals, we find that our results are very similar to studies in Western Europe and the US. Life satisfaction increases with housing standard, health status, economic situation, education, trusting other people, and living in the countryside, and decreases with rising unemployment. However, life satisfaction is lower than in Western countries with about 75% of the people in the sample being not at all satisfied or quite dissatisfied with their life in general. A policy discussion concludes the paper.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
Publisher
Blackwell
Electronic version
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9361.2005.00300.x
Journal title
Review of Development Economics
Volume
10
Issue
1
Start page
59
End page
70
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2006Author
Andrén, Daniela
Martinsson, Peter
Keywords
general life satisfaction
subjective well-being
domain specific satisfaction
Romania
transition economy
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
Language
eng