Americans Less Rushed But No Happier: 1965–2010 Trends in Subjective Time and Happiness

被引:0
作者
John P. Robinson
机构
[1] University of Maryland,Department of Sociology
来源
Social Indicators Research | 2013年 / 113卷
关键词
Subjective time; Social trends; Happiness; Quality of life; Time use;
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暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A general societal consensus seems to have emerged that the pace of daily life, at least in the US and other Western countries, is speeding up. However, there seems little empirical evidence to document its presence, let alone its increase. The present article reviews results from two questions on subjective-time pressure that have been asked periodically in US national probability surveys since 1965, and which were repeated in separate 2009 and 2010 surveys. Counter to the popular societal consensus on an increasingly time-pressured society noted above, respondent reports of feelings of being “always rushed” declined by 6–9 points from those reported in 2004. The decline was found both among employed and unemployed respondents, indicating it was not simply a function of higher unemployment. At the same time, feelings of being “very happy” also declined over this period, despite the finding that time-pressured people have consistently reported being less happy. Moreover, more time-pressured people continued to report being less happy in these 2009–2010 surveys, even after controls for marital status, employment and other important predictors of happiness. Somewhat higher correlations with happiness were found for a related subjective-time question on having excess time on one’s hands.
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页码:1091 / 1104
页数:13
相关论文
共 4 条
[1]  
Robinson J(1996)The great American slowdown American Demographics 18 42-47
[2]  
Godbey G(2008)What do happy people do? Social Indicators Research 89 565-571
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