Beyond God and Government: The Role of Personal Control in Supporting Citizens’ Well-Being in the Face of Changing Economy and Rising Inequality

Based on previous theoretical models, the present research investigated three different psychological constructs (religious belief, trust in government, and the experience of personal control) as moderators of the link between country’s economic growth (i.e., Gross Domestic Product) and income inequ...

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Main Authors: Thuy-vy Nguyen, Jonathon McPhetres, Edward L. Deci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2020-06-01
Series:Social Psychological Bulletin
Subjects:
Online Access:http://spb.psychopen.eu/index.php/spb/article/view/2663
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spelling doaj-be1af18bb4bb4e57b2e97af643f0e1e62020-11-25T03:28:17ZengPsychOpenSocial Psychological Bulletin2569-653X2020-06-0115110.32872/spb.2663spb.2663Beyond God and Government: The Role of Personal Control in Supporting Citizens’ Well-Being in the Face of Changing Economy and Rising InequalityThuy-vy Nguyen0Jonathon McPhetres1Edward L. Deci2University of Durham, Durham, United KingdomUniversity of Regina, Saskatchewan, CanadaAustralian Catholic University, Sydney, AustraliaBased on previous theoretical models, the present research investigated three different psychological constructs (religious belief, trust in government, and the experience of personal control) as moderators of the link between country’s economic growth (i.e., Gross Domestic Product) and income inequality (i.e., Gini) on health, happiness, and life satisfaction. Using a large cross-national data set (N = 490,579), we found that personal control predicted health, happiness, and life satisfaction above and beyond reliance on God and trust in government. Religious belief predicted greater health and buffered the negative effect of income inequality on health only in wealthy economies, but yielded negative correlations with health in poor economies. The associations between personal control and trust in government with well-being outcomes were consistently positive across different levels of countries’ GDP and Gini. Further, personal control also served a compensatory function by buffering the negative effect of income inequality in wealthy economies.http://spb.psychopen.eu/index.php/spb/article/view/2663personal controlreligionsystem justificationself-determinationwell-being
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thuy-vy Nguyen
Jonathon McPhetres
Edward L. Deci
spellingShingle Thuy-vy Nguyen
Jonathon McPhetres
Edward L. Deci
Beyond God and Government: The Role of Personal Control in Supporting Citizens’ Well-Being in the Face of Changing Economy and Rising Inequality
Social Psychological Bulletin
personal control
religion
system justification
self-determination
well-being
author_facet Thuy-vy Nguyen
Jonathon McPhetres
Edward L. Deci
author_sort Thuy-vy Nguyen
title Beyond God and Government: The Role of Personal Control in Supporting Citizens’ Well-Being in the Face of Changing Economy and Rising Inequality
title_short Beyond God and Government: The Role of Personal Control in Supporting Citizens’ Well-Being in the Face of Changing Economy and Rising Inequality
title_full Beyond God and Government: The Role of Personal Control in Supporting Citizens’ Well-Being in the Face of Changing Economy and Rising Inequality
title_fullStr Beyond God and Government: The Role of Personal Control in Supporting Citizens’ Well-Being in the Face of Changing Economy and Rising Inequality
title_full_unstemmed Beyond God and Government: The Role of Personal Control in Supporting Citizens’ Well-Being in the Face of Changing Economy and Rising Inequality
title_sort beyond god and government: the role of personal control in supporting citizens’ well-being in the face of changing economy and rising inequality
publisher PsychOpen
series Social Psychological Bulletin
issn 2569-653X
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Based on previous theoretical models, the present research investigated three different psychological constructs (religious belief, trust in government, and the experience of personal control) as moderators of the link between country’s economic growth (i.e., Gross Domestic Product) and income inequality (i.e., Gini) on health, happiness, and life satisfaction. Using a large cross-national data set (N = 490,579), we found that personal control predicted health, happiness, and life satisfaction above and beyond reliance on God and trust in government. Religious belief predicted greater health and buffered the negative effect of income inequality on health only in wealthy economies, but yielded negative correlations with health in poor economies. The associations between personal control and trust in government with well-being outcomes were consistently positive across different levels of countries’ GDP and Gini. Further, personal control also served a compensatory function by buffering the negative effect of income inequality in wealthy economies.
topic personal control
religion
system justification
self-determination
well-being
url http://spb.psychopen.eu/index.php/spb/article/view/2663
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