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首页 > 英语专区 > 英语学习 > 五万英镑的幸福最超值

五万英镑的幸福最超值

2012-02-14 17:00     作者 :    

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金钱不是的,用钱能不能买到幸福呢?但是很多幸福是建立在金钱的基础之上的。没有钱,就没有面包,何谈精神上的幸福。但是一年收入多少钱,才能达到幸福的黄金点呢?是不是越有钱越幸福呢?

据调查显示,并不是钱越多越幸福。因为高收入也是要付出一定的代价的,下面的调查中得出年收入在五万英镑的人幸福指数会比较高。这是为什么呢?我们一起来看看下面的文章吧。

Money can buy you happiness but only if you earn £50,000 a year – after that you really have to work for it, a study claims.

Earning less than that amount can make you miserable – but earning more does not greatly increase enjoyment of life, it was found.

Researchers found that life contentment only rose steadily with annual income up to level – $75,000, or just below £50,000.

Once earnings soared above this the important things in life such as family and wellbeing made money much less significant

The quality of the randomly-selected participants' everyday experiences did not improve significantly beyond a salary of £48,960.98.

But as income dropped from that amount, respondents reported decreasing happiness and increasing sadness and stress, according to the findings published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The psychologists Prof Daniel Kahneman and Prof Angus Deaton explained people's life evaluations rise steadily with income but the quality of emotional daily experiences levels-off once earnings reach a certain amount.

Life evaluations were measured by asking 1,000 respondents to rate their lives on a scale of zero to 10 while emotional wellbeing was measured according to experiences of certain positive and negative emotions the previous day.

The data also suggested the emotional pain of unfortunate events or circumstances including disease, divorce and being alone are exacerbated by poverty.

The researchers said the study does not imply people's lives will not improve after a raise in annual income from $100,000 (£64,900) to $150,000 (£97,350).

But above a certain income people's emotional wellbeing is held back by other more important issues.

Prof Kahneman and Prof Deaton, of Princeton University, New Jersey, said: "The question of whether 'money buys happiness' comes up frequently in discussions of subjective wellbeing in both scholarly debates and casual conversation.

"More money does not necessarily buy more happiness, but less money is associated with emotional pain.”

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