Eurofound publishes analysis on subjective well-being levels across Europe:
Inequalities in well-being rises in Europe during crisis
(Dublin, Ireland): While life satisfaction increased
marginally across the European Union between 2007 and 2011, happiness
and optimism levels have fallen and perceived social exclusion has
increased, indicating a decline in overall well-being in many European
countries during the crisis. Eurofound’s new report assesses the impact
of the crisis on the subjective well-being of Europeans, drawing
policy-relevant findings from its third European Quality of Life Survey
(EQLS). It is the first in a series of reports which covers social
inequalities, quality of society and public services, and trends in
quality of life in Europe over the past decade.
The results from the latest EQLS, fielded in all 28 EU Member States
as well as six further European countries, shows how the crisis is
affecting some groups more than others. The report identifies Europeans
limited by illness or disability, those who are separated or divorced,
and individuals in the middle-age bracket of 35–49 years as more likely
to have low well-being. The lowest levels of subjective well-being are
reported by people who are unemployed. The report goes on to identify
particular dimensions of well-being where countries do poorly but also
where they do well: for example, high levels of stress are found in
France, high levels of loneliness in Italy and low levels of vitality in
the UK; conversely, a high level of education satisfaction is noted in
Romania and the Netherlands reports low levels of time pressure.
Many countries with higher levels of life satisfaction in 2007reported
lower satisfaction in 2011. In countries where there have been
increases in well-being, they tend to have been enjoyed by those in the
highest-income quartiles. Conversely, the largest falls were experienced
by those in the bottom-income quartile, indicating that the gap in
well-being between the wealthiest and the poorest members of the
population has grown during the crisis.
At the national level, the analysis sounds warning bells for Finland,
the Netherlands and Sweden – all witnessing declining levels of
subjective well-being despite the relatively moderate impact of the
economic crisis in these countries. Nevertheless, the countries in the
cluster of least unequal countries, i.e. the Nordic countries and the
Netherlands – continue to enjoy the highest levels of well-being on most
measures. The Netherlands also has the lowest level of well-being
inequality in Europe. It is important to note that these countries do
not perform well just because they are wealthy. Denmark and Sweden have
lower GDPs per capita than Ireland, and Finland has a lower GDP per
capita than Germany. Data on well-being allow policymakers to identify
the groups and countries that are bearing the brunt of the economic
crisis, as well as those that are doing better than expected, and
provides a new layer of evidence to aid policy.
Analysing well-being at a time of crisis is more relevant than ever
before as it shows how different aspects of quality of life are
affected, thereby informing debate on policy trade-offs. The report
explores new empirical evidence on possible protective factors, showing
for instance that not being in debt is an important factor for the
well-being of people on low income. As Rob Anderson, team leader of
Eurofound’s European quality of life survey, explains “these analyses
help policy-makers identify the types of measures that could protect
people who are already in vulnerable situations against loss of
well-being”.
The report presents an innovative way of looking at inequalities in
well-being; to measure the distribution of well-being within a country,
differences in life satisfaction between the 20% with the highest life
satisfaction and the 20% with the lowest life satisfaction in each
country were computed. In addition, in each country it presents the
average distance in life satisfaction between two individuals chosen at
random. These analyses identify Bulgaria, Hungary, Slovakia, Cyprus,
Romania, the UK and Austria as having particularly large differences in
well-being inequality.
The evidence suggests clear benefits from reducing income inequalities
within a country. Rising inequality may be linked to declining
well-being in the countries with higher levels of life satisfaction in
2007, despite rising average incomes. Improving the situation of the
least well-off is most likely to result in the largest gains in
well-being.
This report is one of a series of new reports from Eurofound which
examine the results from the third EQLS and changes in recent years.
These include the overview report Quality of life in Europe: Impacts of
the crisis (Eurofound, 2012) and the new reports on subjective
well-being, social inequalities, quality of society and public services,
and trends in quality of life in Europe over the past decade 2003–2012.


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