Happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias
The world spends a remarkable $250 billion a year on lottery tickets. Yet, perplexingly, it has proved difficult for social scientists to show that lottery windfalls actually make people happier. This is the famous and still unresolved paradox due initially to Brickman and colleagues. Here we descri...
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sg-smu-ink.soe_research-34372021-06-25T01:44:08Z Happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias KIM, Seonghoon OSWALD, Andrew J. The world spends a remarkable $250 billion a year on lottery tickets. Yet, perplexingly, it has proved difficult for social scientists to show that lottery windfalls actually make people happier. This is the famous and still unresolved paradox due initially to Brickman and colleagues. Here we describe an underlying weakness that has affected the research area, and explain the concept of lottery‐ticket bias (LT bias), which stems from unobservable lottery spending. We then collect new data—in the world’s most intense lottery‐playing nation, Singapore—on the amount that people spend on lottery tickets (n = 5626). We demonstrate that, once we correct for LT bias, a lottery windfall is predictive of a substantial improvement in happiness and well‐being. 2021-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/2438 info:doi/10.1111/roiw.12469 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soe_research/article/3437/viewcontent/Happy_Lottery_Winners_and_LT_Bias_pvoa.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Economics eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University happiness income well-being GHQ mental-health lottery Singapore lottery ticket bias Behavioral Economics |
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happiness income well-being GHQ mental-health lottery Singapore lottery ticket bias Behavioral Economics KIM, Seonghoon OSWALD, Andrew J. Happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias |
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The world spends a remarkable $250 billion a year on lottery tickets. Yet, perplexingly, it has proved difficult for social scientists to show that lottery windfalls actually make people happier. This is the famous and still unresolved paradox due initially to Brickman and colleagues. Here we describe an underlying weakness that has affected the research area, and explain the concept of lottery‐ticket bias (LT bias), which stems from unobservable lottery spending. We then collect new data—in the world’s most intense lottery‐playing nation, Singapore—on the amount that people spend on lottery tickets (n = 5626). We demonstrate that, once we correct for LT bias, a lottery windfall is predictive of a substantial improvement in happiness and well‐being. |
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KIM, Seonghoon OSWALD, Andrew J. |
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KIM, Seonghoon OSWALD, Andrew J. |
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KIM, Seonghoon |
title |
Happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias |
title_short |
Happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias |
title_full |
Happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias |
title_fullStr |
Happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias |
title_full_unstemmed |
Happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias |
title_sort |
happy lottery winners and lottery-ticket bias |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2021 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/2438 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soe_research/article/3437/viewcontent/Happy_Lottery_Winners_and_LT_Bias_pvoa.pdf |
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