The Role of Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics in Affecting Subjective Well-being. The Case of Hungary

The paper investigates the influence of various demographic and social factors on the perception of well-being in Hungary. For the purpose of the analysis, various measures of subjective well-being have been developed, as dependent variables, using both narrower and broader set of items, and princip...

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Main Author: Péter Róbert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tallinn University 2019-12-01
Series:Studies of Transition States and Societies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://publications.tlu.ee/index.php/stss/article/view/705/638
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spelling doaj-7fb921816cca4c56b21b55a733dd6c402020-11-25T02:57:44ZengTallinn University Studies of Transition States and Societies1736-874X1736-87582019-12-01112322The Role of Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics in Affecting Subjective Well-being. The Case of HungaryPéter Róbert0Széchenyi University, TÁRKI Social Research InstituteThe paper investigates the influence of various demographic and social factors on the perception of well-being in Hungary. For the purpose of the analysis, various measures of subjective well-being have been developed, as dependent variables, using both narrower and broader set of items, and principal factor analysis was applied to construct normalised indices. Demographic predictors include gender, age, family composition, residence; sociological predictors contain education, labour market position, income and wealth as well as questions on health and religiosity. Hungary is an interesting case to study, given the well-known strong deficit in subjective well-being. The phenomenon is particularly motivating in the light of the official propaganda by the governing political forces on the country’s economic and social progress. Low level of subjective well-being is confirmed again, partly in international comparison, partly from the perspective of temporal change. Furthermore, detailed analysis of the data reveals that Hungarians seem to be markedly divided by age, residence and social status for higher or lower assessment of well-being. Regression models prove that material conditions have the strongest impact on subjective well-being, even if controlled for education and labour market position. The results on subjective-wellbeing raise questions for public policy in Hungary.http://publications.tlu.ee/index.php/stss/article/view/705/638subjective wellbeingpublic opinion researchmultivariate analysishungary
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Péter Róbert
spellingShingle Péter Róbert
The Role of Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics in Affecting Subjective Well-being. The Case of Hungary
Studies of Transition States and Societies
subjective wellbeing
public opinion research
multivariate analysis
hungary
author_facet Péter Róbert
author_sort Péter Róbert
title The Role of Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics in Affecting Subjective Well-being. The Case of Hungary
title_short The Role of Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics in Affecting Subjective Well-being. The Case of Hungary
title_full The Role of Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics in Affecting Subjective Well-being. The Case of Hungary
title_fullStr The Role of Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics in Affecting Subjective Well-being. The Case of Hungary
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics in Affecting Subjective Well-being. The Case of Hungary
title_sort role of demographic and socio-economic characteristics in affecting subjective well-being. the case of hungary
publisher Tallinn University
series Studies of Transition States and Societies
issn 1736-874X
1736-8758
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The paper investigates the influence of various demographic and social factors on the perception of well-being in Hungary. For the purpose of the analysis, various measures of subjective well-being have been developed, as dependent variables, using both narrower and broader set of items, and principal factor analysis was applied to construct normalised indices. Demographic predictors include gender, age, family composition, residence; sociological predictors contain education, labour market position, income and wealth as well as questions on health and religiosity. Hungary is an interesting case to study, given the well-known strong deficit in subjective well-being. The phenomenon is particularly motivating in the light of the official propaganda by the governing political forces on the country’s economic and social progress. Low level of subjective well-being is confirmed again, partly in international comparison, partly from the perspective of temporal change. Furthermore, detailed analysis of the data reveals that Hungarians seem to be markedly divided by age, residence and social status for higher or lower assessment of well-being. Regression models prove that material conditions have the strongest impact on subjective well-being, even if controlled for education and labour market position. The results on subjective-wellbeing raise questions for public policy in Hungary.
topic subjective wellbeing
public opinion research
multivariate analysis
hungary
url http://publications.tlu.ee/index.php/stss/article/view/705/638
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