The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries

Recent research showed that the associations between lower socioeconomic status and decreased subjective wellbeing were largest in developed countries, rather than developing ones. The decrease in religiosity in developed countries, based on the secularisation thesis, could be a possible explanation...

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Main Author: Lau, Samuel Miang Yeow
Other Authors: Darren Yeo
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168363
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1683632023-06-18T15:32:01Z The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries Lau, Samuel Miang Yeow Darren Yeo School of Social Sciences darrenyeo@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Recent research showed that the associations between lower socioeconomic status and decreased subjective wellbeing were largest in developed countries, rather than developing ones. The decrease in religiosity in developed countries, based on the secularisation thesis, could be a possible explanation for this phenomenon. Thus, this study explored the associations between religious practice and belief, socioeconomic status, and country development on subjective wellbeing. I conducted multilevel modelling utilising the publicly available World Values Survey dataset, consisting of 94,278 participants from 62 countries after filtering. I found that 1) religiosity and socioeconomic status were positively associated with subjective wellbeing, 2) individuals in developed countries experienced significantly greater subjective wellbeing when they perceived themselves to be in a higher, rather than lower, social class, compared to individuals in the same perceived social class in developing countries, and 3) individuals with higher religious practice and belief in lower social classes reported higher subjective wellbeing than their non-religious counterparts in the same socioeconomic status; this effect was not found to differ between developing and developed countries. Based on these findings, I made recommendations that subjective wellbeing can be enhanced by religious support worldwide, and developed countries could adopt mindfulness-based interventions to alter societal values that pursue intrinsic, rather than extrinsic, goals, and contentment over material achievement. Keywords: Bachelor of Social Sciences in Psychology 2023-06-12T03:52:46Z 2023-06-12T03:52:46Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Lau, S. M. Y. (2023). The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168363 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168363 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Lau, Samuel Miang Yeow
The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries
description Recent research showed that the associations between lower socioeconomic status and decreased subjective wellbeing were largest in developed countries, rather than developing ones. The decrease in religiosity in developed countries, based on the secularisation thesis, could be a possible explanation for this phenomenon. Thus, this study explored the associations between religious practice and belief, socioeconomic status, and country development on subjective wellbeing. I conducted multilevel modelling utilising the publicly available World Values Survey dataset, consisting of 94,278 participants from 62 countries after filtering. I found that 1) religiosity and socioeconomic status were positively associated with subjective wellbeing, 2) individuals in developed countries experienced significantly greater subjective wellbeing when they perceived themselves to be in a higher, rather than lower, social class, compared to individuals in the same perceived social class in developing countries, and 3) individuals with higher religious practice and belief in lower social classes reported higher subjective wellbeing than their non-religious counterparts in the same socioeconomic status; this effect was not found to differ between developing and developed countries. Based on these findings, I made recommendations that subjective wellbeing can be enhanced by religious support worldwide, and developed countries could adopt mindfulness-based interventions to alter societal values that pursue intrinsic, rather than extrinsic, goals, and contentment over material achievement. Keywords:
author2 Darren Yeo
author_facet Darren Yeo
Lau, Samuel Miang Yeow
format Final Year Project
author Lau, Samuel Miang Yeow
author_sort Lau, Samuel Miang Yeow
title The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries
title_short The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries
title_full The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries
title_fullStr The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries
title_full_unstemmed The associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries
title_sort associations between religiosity, socioeconomic status, and subjective wellbeing between developing and developed countries
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168363
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