710 research outputs found
The (Non-)Effect of Unemployment Benefits:Variations in the effect of unemployment on life-satisfaction between EU countries
A negative effect of unemployment on subjective well-being has been demonstrated in many studies casting substantial doubt about assumptions of decisions of individuals to choose unemployment voluntarily as the utility-maximising option. These studies have been extended to take into account national-level context factors which have been shown to moderate the relationship between unemployment and life-satisfaction. So far most studies focussed mainly on economic indicators, although demographic and cultural differences between countries also affect how unemployment is perceived. An important variable that is not included in the majority of proper multilevel studies is the extent of unemployment benefits. Traditional micro-economic approaches argue that more extensive provisions should reduce the cost of unemployment and therefore reduce the motivation to regain employment—reflected in a reduction of the negative impact of unemployment. This study investigates this claim by using European Values Study data from all European Union countries and Norway as well as harmonised macroeconomic statistics from Eurostat. It finds that the effect of unemployment on life-satisfaction is indeed moderated by economic and demographic national-level factors, but not by unemployment benefits. To what extent unemployment reduces life-satisfaction varies greatly between countries, but appears to not be influenced by the extent of state unemployment provisions
The Emerging Aversion to Inequality: Evidence from Poland 1992-2005
This paper provides an illustration of the changing tolerance for inequality in a context of radical political and economic transformation and rapid economic growth. We focus on the Polish experience of transition and explore self-declared attitudes of the citizens. Using monthly representative surveys of the population, realized by the Polish poll institute (CBOS) from 1992 to 2005, we identify a structural break in the relation between income inequality and subjective evaluation of well-being. The downturn in the tolerance for inequality (1997) coincides with the increasing distrust of political elites.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/64387/1/wp919.pd
Nominal or Real? The Impact of Regional Price Levels on Satisfaction with Life
According to economic theory, real income, i.e., nominal income adjusted for purchasing power, should be the relevant source of life satisfaction. Previous work, however, has only studied the impact of inflation adjusted nominal income and not taken into account regional differences in purchasing power. Therefore, we use a novel data set to study how regional price levels affect satisfaction with life. The data set comprises about 7 million data points that are used to construct a price level for each of the 428 administrative districts in Germany. We estimate pooled OLS and ordered probit models that include a comprehensive set of individual level, time-varying and time-invariant control variables as well as control variables that capture district heterogeneity other than the price level. Our results show that higher price levels significantly reduce life satisfaction. Furthermore, we find that a higher price level tends to induce a larger loss in life satisfaction than a corresponding decrease in nominal income. A formal test of neutrality of money, however, does not reject neutrality of money. Our results provide an argument in favor of regional indexation of government transfer payments such as social welfare benefits
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Life satisfaction and confidence in national institutions: evidence from South America
A number of South American countries experienced turbulent democratic, political and economic upheaval over the last 40 years in the form of coup d’états in the 1970s, tumultuous elections, and repeated severe economic crises, some of which happened fairly recently. Starting in 2010, a number of court proceedings across the region have made past military coup d’états the focus of national conversations. South American citizens may, therefore, have lost confidence in national institutions that have repeatedly disappointed their trust and expectations; a situation with potentially detrimental effects on their well-being. Using eight waves of the Gallup World Poll collected between 2009 and 2016 across ten South American countries, we investigate to what extent people’s confidence in financial institutions, the honesty of elections, the military, the judicial system, the national government and the police is associated with people’s current and expectation of future life satisfaction. We find that people who report confidence in these six institutions rate their current and expected life satisfaction, on average, to be higher than those who lack these types of institutional confidence, even after controlling for demographic factors and macroeconomic indicators. In addition, we investigate changes over time for all six measures of confidence in institutions as well as for current and expectation of future life satisfaction. Our results suggest that governments’ investments in well-functioning institutions may contribute positively to subjective well-being in a society. However, our analysis is correlational and we thus cannot rule out reverse causality
On the monotone stability approach to BSDEs with jumps: Extensions, concrete criteria and examples
We show a concise extension of the monotone stability approach to backward
stochastic differential equations (BSDEs) that are jointly driven by a Brownian
motion and a random measure for jumps, which could be of infinite activity with
a non-deterministic and time inhomogeneous compensator. The BSDE generator
function can be non convex and needs not to satisfy global Lipschitz conditions
in the jump integrand. We contribute concrete criteria, that are easy to
verify, for results on existence and uniqueness of bounded solutions to BSDEs
with jumps, and on comparison and a-priori -bounds. Several
examples and counter examples are discussed to shed light on the scope and
applicability of different assumptions, and we provide an overview of major
applications in finance and optimal control.Comment: 28 pages. Added DOI
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-030-22285-7_1 for final
publication, corrected typo (missing gamma) in example 4.1
Posttraumatic Growth in Breast Cancer Survivors: Are Depressive Symptoms Really Negative Predictors?
Objective: Breast cancer (BC) diagnosis is a potentially traumatic event, the related challenges of which
can trigger positive or negative reactions. Posttraumatic growth (PTG) is defined as a positive psychological
change experienced as a result of the struggle. The present study aimed to shed light on the
relationship between the evolution of depressive symptoms over time and PTG in a group of BC
survivors. Method: Depressive symptoms at the time of diagnosis (T0) and 2 years later (T1) were
evaluated to investigate their potential impact on the level of PTG at T1. A total of 147 BC patients were
recruited and divided into 4 groups according to the changes in depressive symptoms they experienced
over time (patients who were never depressed, no longer depressed, still depressed, and depressed now).
A One-way analysis of variance was run to compare the levels of PTG for the four groups. Results: The
One-way analysis of variance showed that PTG score was significantly different among groups with
different levels of depressive symptoms (p .008). Post hoc comparisons indicated that the PTG score
was statistically significantly higher in the no longer depressed group compared with the still depressed
and depressed now groups. Conclusions: The current results suggest that high levels of depressive
symptoms, displayed at the time of cancer diagnosis, can be considered catalysts for PTG at follow-up,
on condition that women experience elevated depressive symptoms only in the first period of the disease
From offender to victim-oriented monitoring : a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and Wales
The increasingly psychological terrain of crime and disorder management has had a transformative impact upon
the use of electronic monitoring technologies. Surveillance technologies such as electronic monitoring ‑ EM,
biometrics, and video surveillance have flourished in commercial environments that market the benefits of
asocial technologies in managing disorderly behavior and which, despite often chimerical crime prevention
promises, appeal to the ontologically insecure social imagination. The growth of EM in criminal justice has
subsequently taken place despite, at best, equivocal evidence that it protects the public and reduces recidivism.
Innovative developments in Portugal, Argentina and the United States have re-imagined EM technologies
as more personalized devices that can support victims rather than control offenders. These developments
represent a re-conceptualization of the use of the technology beyond the neoliberal prism of rational choice
theories and offender-oriented thinking that influenced first generation thinking about EM. This paper
identifies the socio-political influences that helped conceptualize first generation thinking about EM as, firstly,
a community sentence and latterly, as a technique of urban security. The paper reviews attempts to theorize
the role and function of EM surveillance technologies within and beyond criminal justice and explores the
contribution of victimological perspectives to the use of EM 2.0
Cracking down on bribery
Do crackdowns on bribery impact corrupt behavior in the long run? In this paper we observe the long-run impact of a short-term punishment institution (i.e., a crackdown) on bribery behavior in a lab setting. We conduct lab experiments in two countries with cultures that differ in corruption norms, and which experience very different levels of bribery: the US and Pakistan. Bribery is implemented in the laboratory as a repeated three-player sequential game, consisting of a firm, a government official and a citizen. The design contains three phases: pre-crackdown, crackdown, and post-crackdown. Results show that post-crackdown behavior is not significantly different from pre-crackdown behavior in either country. We conclude that short-term crackdowns may impact behavior in the short run, depending on the strength of the existing corruption norms in the country. More importantly, in our setting crackdowns are completely ineffective in the long run, as corrupt behavior rebounds to pre-crackdown levels
Combined assessment of diffusion parameters and cerebral blood flow within basal ganglia in early Parkinson's disease
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a sensitive tool for detecting brain tissue microstructural alterations in Parkinson's disease (PD). Abnormal cerebral perfusion patterns have also been reported in PD patients using arterial spin labeling (ASL) MRI. In this study we aimed to perform a combined DTI and ASL assessment in PD patients within the basal ganglia, in order to test the relationship between microstructural and perfusion alterations. Fifty-two subjects participated in this study. Specifically, 26 PD patients [mean age (SD) = 66.7 (8.9) years, 21 males, median (IQR) Modified Hoehn and Yahr = 1.5 (1-1.6)] and twenty-six healthy controls [HC, mean age (SD) = 65.2 (7.5), 15 males] were scanned with 1.5T MRI. Fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), axial diffusivity (AD), radial diffusivity (RD) maps were derived from diffusion-weighted images, while cerebral blood flow (CBF) maps were computed from ASL data. After registration to Montreal Neurological Institute standard space, FA, MD, AD, RD and CBF median values were extracted within specific regions of interest: substantia nigra, caudate, putamen, globus pallidus, thalamus, red nucleus and subthalamic nucleus. DTI measures and CBF were compared between the two groups. The relationship between diffusion parameters and CBF was tested with Spearman's correlations. False discovery rate (FDR)-corrected p-values lower than 0.05 were considered significant, while uncorrected p-values <0.05 were considered a trend. No significant FA, MD and RD differences were observed. AD was significantly increased in PD patients compared with HC in the putamen (p = 0.005, pFDR = 0.035). No significant CBF differences were found between PD patients and HC. Diffusion parameters were not significantly correlated with CBF in the HC group, while a significant correlation emerged for PD patients in the caudate nucleus, for all DTI measures (with FA: r = 0.543, pFDR = 0.028; with MD: r = -0.661, pFDR = 0.002; with AD: r = -0.628, pFDR = 0.007; with RD: r = -0.635, pFDR = 0.003). This study showed that DTI is a more sensitive technique than ASL to detect alterations in the basal ganglia in the early phase of PD. Our results suggest that, although DTI and ASL convey different information, a relationship between microstructural integrity and perfusion changes in the caudate may be present
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