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我要参加一个英文辩论赛,辩题是金钱可以买到幸福吗?我们是正方,是可以买到!我需要一些辩证的例子,段落,越多愈好!小弟很感激!...
我要参加一个英文辩论赛,辩题是金钱可以买到幸福吗?我们是正方,是可以买到!我需要一些辩证的例子,段落,越多愈好!小弟很感激!
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Money can buy happiness - with a catch
Money can buy happiness, but only if you spend it on someone else, researchers reported.
Money can buy happiness, but only if you spend it on someone else, researchers reported.
Spending as little as $US5 a day on someone else could significantly boost happiness, the team at the University of British Columbia and Harvard Business School found.
Their experiments on more than 630 Americans showed they were measurably happier when they spent money on others -- even if they thought spending the money on themselves would make them happier.
"We wanted to test our theory that how people spend their money is at least as important as how much money they earn," said Elizabeth Dunn, a psychologist at the University of British Columbia.
They asked their 600 volunteers first to rate their general happiness, report their annual income and detail their monthly spending including bills, gifts for themselves, gifts for others and donations to charity.
"Regardless of how much income each person made, those who spent money on others reported greater happiness, while those who spent more on themselves did not," Dunn said in a statement.
Dunn's team also surveyed 16 employees at a company in Boston before and after they received an annual profit-sharing bonus of between $US3000 and $US8000.
"Employees who devoted more of their bonus to pro-social spending experienced greater happiness after receiving the bonus, and the manner in which they spent that bonus was a more important predictor of their happiness than the size of the bonus itself," they wrote in their report, published in the journal Science.
They gave their volunteers $US5 or $US20 and half got clear instructions on how to spend it. Those who spent the money on someone or something else reported feeling happier about it.
"These findings suggest that very minor alterations in spending allocations -- as little as $US5 -- may be enough to produce real gains in happiness on a given day," Dunn said.
金钱可以“买”到快乐?
研究人员日前称,金钱可以买到快乐,但前提是你得把钱花在别人身上。
英国哥伦比亚大学和哈佛商学院的研究小组发现,每天只需为别人花5美元,就能大大提升快乐感。
研究人员对630多名美国人所做的实验表明,即使实验对象认为为自己花钱会更快乐,但实际结果显示,他们为别人花钱时其实更加快乐。
英国哥伦比亚大学的心理学家伊丽莎白?杜恩说:“我们试图证明‘人们的花钱方式与挣钱多少至少同等重要’。”
研究人员让600名志愿者评价自己的总体幸福感,报告年收入以及详细的月支出情况,包括应付账单、为自己及他人购买礼物支出以及慈善捐献。
杜恩在一份声明中说:“无论他们挣多少钱,为别人花更多钱的人称自己的快乐感增强,而为自己花较多钱的人则没有这种感受。”
杜恩的研究小组还对波士顿一家公司的16名员工领到年终奖之前和之后的情况进行了调查,年终奖金额从3000美元到8000美元不等。
研究人员在研究报告中提到:“这些员工领到奖金后,将较多钱花在别人身上的人快乐感更强,他们支配这笔钱的方式比奖金本身的多少对快乐感的影响更大。”该研究报告在《科学》期刊中发表。
研究人员向志愿者们分发了5美元至20美元金额不等的钱,并向其中一半人说明了该如何花这些钱。结果发现,将钱用于别人或其它事情的人感到更快乐。
杜恩说:“这些研究结果表明,每天只需稍稍改变支出分配——哪怕为别人花5美元,就能得到更多快乐。”
母爱的价值
One night when my wife was preparing dinner, our little son took a piece of paper to her which read:
For washing the car......................$5.00
For making my own bed this week..........$1.00
Going to the provision shop..............$0.50
Playing with little sister ..............$0.25
Taking out the rubbish...................$1.00
Getting a good report card...............$5.00
And for sweeping the common corridor.....$2.00
Total ...................................$14.75
His mother looked at him standing there expecting payment. I could see a thousand memories flashed through her mind. So she picked up the pen and turning the paper over, this is what she wrote:
For 9 months I carried you, growing inside me....................No Charge
For the nights I sat up with you, doctored and prayed for you....No Charge
For the toys, food and clothes and wiping your nose..............No Charge
When you add it all up, the full cost of my love.................No Charge
Well, when he finished reading, he had great big tears in his eyes. He looked at his mother and said, "Mummy, I love you." Then he took the pen and in great big letters wrote on the "bill" "All paid."
Money might not buy you love, but it might be able to buy you happiness. Research by two US economists suggests that richer countries are happier than poorer ones and that as countries get richer their inhabitants become happier.
Conventional wisdom of the past three decades held that higher national gross domestic product often did not translate into a greater overall sense of wellbeing.
This view, known as the Easterlin Paradox after a 1974 paper by economist Richard Easterlin, inspired some calls for governments to shift their focus away from increasing GDP.
At the beginning of this year, French president Nicolas Sarkozy announced an effort to find a new measure for GDP that took a greater account of quality of life.
But a paper by Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers, economists at the Wharton business school at the University of Pennsylvania, argues that the Easterlin Paradox is not true.
Prof Wolfers said their dissenting conclusion partly came from improved statistics covering more countries - poor as well as rich - and a greater number of happiness surveys conducted over the past three decades.
The paper will be discussed next week at the Brookings Institution think-tank spring conference.
Prof Easterlin, who has seen the paper, said his paradox still stood. He commended his younger critics' "serious research" but they needed to focus more on happiness in specific countries, rather than "throwing all of these countries together", he said.
Prof Gary Becker, a University of Chicago Nobel prize winner, will comment on the finding at next week's conference.
"I think a lot of people found it politically comforting to find that income only mattered for the very poor and once we satisfied our basic needs it didn't matter," Prof Wolfers said.
金钱也许无法为你买来爱情,但或许能为你买来幸福。两位美国经济学家的研究显示,较富裕国家的人比较贫穷的国家更幸福,而随着国家富裕程度的提高,国民的幸福程度也会增加。
过去30年的传统观点认为,更高的国内生产总值(GDP)通常不会转化为更强的整体幸福感。
这种观点被称作伊斯特林悖论(Easterlin Paradox),是经济学家理查德•伊斯特林(R.Easterlin)在1974年的一篇论文中发现的。一些人士为此呼吁,各国政府应改变对提升GDP的关注。
今年初,法国总统尼古拉•萨科奇(Nicolas Sarkozy)宣布,将努力寻找一项新的GDP衡量指标,以便更好地反映生活质量。
但宾夕法尼亚大学(University of Pennsylvania)沃顿商学院(Wharton business school)的经济学家贝齐•史蒂文森(Betsey Stevenson)和贾斯廷•沃尔弗斯(Justin Wolfers)发表的一篇论文认为,伊斯特林悖论并不成立。
沃尔弗斯表示,他们的不同结论部分来自统计数据的改善——涵盖了更多国家,既有富国,也有穷国;以及过去30年进行了更多的幸福调查。
下周召开的布鲁金斯学会(Brookings Institution)智库春季会议将讨论这两位经济学家的论文。
读过这篇论文的伊斯特林表示,他的悖论依然成立。他称赞了两位年轻批评者的“严肃研究”,但他表示,他们需要更多地关注特定国家的幸福,而非“将所有这些国家拼凑到一起”。
芝加哥大学诺贝尔奖得主加里•贝克尔(Gary Becker)将在下周的会议上发表对以上发现的看法。
贝克尔表示:“我认为,如果发现收入只对那些极端贫困的人才重要,一旦基本需求得到满足,收入就不再重要了,许多人会从政治上感到欣慰。”
Happiness lies not in the mere possession of money ; it lies in the joy of achievement , in the thrill of creative effort .
(Franklin Roosevelt , American president )
幸福不在于拥有金钱,而在于获得成就时的喜悦以及产生创造力的激情。(美国总统 罗斯福. F.)
First wealth is health.
健康是人生第一财富。—— Emerson 爱默生
Happiness lies, first of all, in health.
快乐首先在于有健康的身体。—— G. W. Curtis柯蒂斯
Health is better than wealth.
健康尤胜于财富。—— Ray 雷
A healthy mind is in a healthy body.
健全的精神,寓于健全的体格。—— Juvenal 朱文奴
家人才是幸福的关键
Poll: Family ties key to youth happiness
So you're between the ages of 13 and 24. What makes you happy?
So you're between the ages of 13 and 24. What makes you happy?
Spending time with family was the top answer to that open-ended question, according to an extensive survey -- more than 100 questions asked of 1,280 people ages 13-24 -- conducted by The Associated Press on the nature of happiness among America's young people.
Next was spending time with friends, followed by time with a significant other. And good news for parents: Nearly three-quarters of young people say their relationship with their parents makes them happy.
"They're my foundation," says Kristiana St. John, 17, a high-school student from Queens in New York. "My mom tells me that even if I do something stupid, she's still going to love me no matter what. Just knowing that makes me feel very happy and blessed."
Other results are more disconcerting. While most young people are happy overall with the way their lives are going, there are racial differences: the poll shows whites to be happier than blacks and Hispanics. A lot of young people feel stress, particularly those from the middle class, and females more than males.
You might think money would be clearly tied to a general sense of happiness. But almost no one said "money" when asked what makes them happy, though people with the highest family incomes are generally happier with life. However, having highly educated parents is a stronger predictor of happiness than income.
And sex? Yes, we were getting to that. Being sexually active actually leads to less happiness among 13-17 year olds, according to the survey. If you're 18 to 24, sex might lead to more happiness in the moment, but not in general.
Overwhelmingly, young people think marriage would make them happy and want to be married some day. Most also want to have kids.
Finally, when asked to name their heroes, nearly half of respondents mentioned one or both of their parents. The winner, by a nose: Mom.
Money can buy happiness, but only if you spend it on someone else, researchers reported.
Money can buy happiness, but only if you spend it on someone else, researchers reported.
Spending as little as $US5 a day on someone else could significantly boost happiness, the team at the University of British Columbia and Harvard Business School found.
Their experiments on more than 630 Americans showed they were measurably happier when they spent money on others -- even if they thought spending the money on themselves would make them happier.
"We wanted to test our theory that how people spend their money is at least as important as how much money they earn," said Elizabeth Dunn, a psychologist at the University of British Columbia.
They asked their 600 volunteers first to rate their general happiness, report their annual income and detail their monthly spending including bills, gifts for themselves, gifts for others and donations to charity.
"Regardless of how much income each person made, those who spent money on others reported greater happiness, while those who spent more on themselves did not," Dunn said in a statement.
Dunn's team also surveyed 16 employees at a company in Boston before and after they received an annual profit-sharing bonus of between $US3000 and $US8000.
"Employees who devoted more of their bonus to pro-social spending experienced greater happiness after receiving the bonus, and the manner in which they spent that bonus was a more important predictor of their happiness than the size of the bonus itself," they wrote in their report, published in the journal Science.
They gave their volunteers $US5 or $US20 and half got clear instructions on how to spend it. Those who spent the money on someone or something else reported feeling happier about it.
"These findings suggest that very minor alterations in spending allocations -- as little as $US5 -- may be enough to produce real gains in happiness on a given day," Dunn said.
金钱可以“买”到快乐?
研究人员日前称,金钱可以买到快乐,但前提是你得把钱花在别人身上。
英国哥伦比亚大学和哈佛商学院的研究小组发现,每天只需为别人花5美元,就能大大提升快乐感。
研究人员对630多名美国人所做的实验表明,即使实验对象认为为自己花钱会更快乐,但实际结果显示,他们为别人花钱时其实更加快乐。
英国哥伦比亚大学的心理学家伊丽莎白?杜恩说:“我们试图证明‘人们的花钱方式与挣钱多少至少同等重要’。”
研究人员让600名志愿者评价自己的总体幸福感,报告年收入以及详细的月支出情况,包括应付账单、为自己及他人购买礼物支出以及慈善捐献。
杜恩在一份声明中说:“无论他们挣多少钱,为别人花更多钱的人称自己的快乐感增强,而为自己花较多钱的人则没有这种感受。”
杜恩的研究小组还对波士顿一家公司的16名员工领到年终奖之前和之后的情况进行了调查,年终奖金额从3000美元到8000美元不等。
研究人员在研究报告中提到:“这些员工领到奖金后,将较多钱花在别人身上的人快乐感更强,他们支配这笔钱的方式比奖金本身的多少对快乐感的影响更大。”该研究报告在《科学》期刊中发表。
研究人员向志愿者们分发了5美元至20美元金额不等的钱,并向其中一半人说明了该如何花这些钱。结果发现,将钱用于别人或其它事情的人感到更快乐。
杜恩说:“这些研究结果表明,每天只需稍稍改变支出分配——哪怕为别人花5美元,就能得到更多快乐。”
母爱的价值
One night when my wife was preparing dinner, our little son took a piece of paper to her which read:
For washing the car......................$5.00
For making my own bed this week..........$1.00
Going to the provision shop..............$0.50
Playing with little sister ..............$0.25
Taking out the rubbish...................$1.00
Getting a good report card...............$5.00
And for sweeping the common corridor.....$2.00
Total ...................................$14.75
His mother looked at him standing there expecting payment. I could see a thousand memories flashed through her mind. So she picked up the pen and turning the paper over, this is what she wrote:
For 9 months I carried you, growing inside me....................No Charge
For the nights I sat up with you, doctored and prayed for you....No Charge
For the toys, food and clothes and wiping your nose..............No Charge
When you add it all up, the full cost of my love.................No Charge
Well, when he finished reading, he had great big tears in his eyes. He looked at his mother and said, "Mummy, I love you." Then he took the pen and in great big letters wrote on the "bill" "All paid."
Money might not buy you love, but it might be able to buy you happiness. Research by two US economists suggests that richer countries are happier than poorer ones and that as countries get richer their inhabitants become happier.
Conventional wisdom of the past three decades held that higher national gross domestic product often did not translate into a greater overall sense of wellbeing.
This view, known as the Easterlin Paradox after a 1974 paper by economist Richard Easterlin, inspired some calls for governments to shift their focus away from increasing GDP.
At the beginning of this year, French president Nicolas Sarkozy announced an effort to find a new measure for GDP that took a greater account of quality of life.
But a paper by Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers, economists at the Wharton business school at the University of Pennsylvania, argues that the Easterlin Paradox is not true.
Prof Wolfers said their dissenting conclusion partly came from improved statistics covering more countries - poor as well as rich - and a greater number of happiness surveys conducted over the past three decades.
The paper will be discussed next week at the Brookings Institution think-tank spring conference.
Prof Easterlin, who has seen the paper, said his paradox still stood. He commended his younger critics' "serious research" but they needed to focus more on happiness in specific countries, rather than "throwing all of these countries together", he said.
Prof Gary Becker, a University of Chicago Nobel prize winner, will comment on the finding at next week's conference.
"I think a lot of people found it politically comforting to find that income only mattered for the very poor and once we satisfied our basic needs it didn't matter," Prof Wolfers said.
金钱也许无法为你买来爱情,但或许能为你买来幸福。两位美国经济学家的研究显示,较富裕国家的人比较贫穷的国家更幸福,而随着国家富裕程度的提高,国民的幸福程度也会增加。
过去30年的传统观点认为,更高的国内生产总值(GDP)通常不会转化为更强的整体幸福感。
这种观点被称作伊斯特林悖论(Easterlin Paradox),是经济学家理查德•伊斯特林(R.Easterlin)在1974年的一篇论文中发现的。一些人士为此呼吁,各国政府应改变对提升GDP的关注。
今年初,法国总统尼古拉•萨科奇(Nicolas Sarkozy)宣布,将努力寻找一项新的GDP衡量指标,以便更好地反映生活质量。
但宾夕法尼亚大学(University of Pennsylvania)沃顿商学院(Wharton business school)的经济学家贝齐•史蒂文森(Betsey Stevenson)和贾斯廷•沃尔弗斯(Justin Wolfers)发表的一篇论文认为,伊斯特林悖论并不成立。
沃尔弗斯表示,他们的不同结论部分来自统计数据的改善——涵盖了更多国家,既有富国,也有穷国;以及过去30年进行了更多的幸福调查。
下周召开的布鲁金斯学会(Brookings Institution)智库春季会议将讨论这两位经济学家的论文。
读过这篇论文的伊斯特林表示,他的悖论依然成立。他称赞了两位年轻批评者的“严肃研究”,但他表示,他们需要更多地关注特定国家的幸福,而非“将所有这些国家拼凑到一起”。
芝加哥大学诺贝尔奖得主加里•贝克尔(Gary Becker)将在下周的会议上发表对以上发现的看法。
贝克尔表示:“我认为,如果发现收入只对那些极端贫困的人才重要,一旦基本需求得到满足,收入就不再重要了,许多人会从政治上感到欣慰。”
Happiness lies not in the mere possession of money ; it lies in the joy of achievement , in the thrill of creative effort .
(Franklin Roosevelt , American president )
幸福不在于拥有金钱,而在于获得成就时的喜悦以及产生创造力的激情。(美国总统 罗斯福. F.)
First wealth is health.
健康是人生第一财富。—— Emerson 爱默生
Happiness lies, first of all, in health.
快乐首先在于有健康的身体。—— G. W. Curtis柯蒂斯
Health is better than wealth.
健康尤胜于财富。—— Ray 雷
A healthy mind is in a healthy body.
健全的精神,寓于健全的体格。—— Juvenal 朱文奴
家人才是幸福的关键
Poll: Family ties key to youth happiness
So you're between the ages of 13 and 24. What makes you happy?
So you're between the ages of 13 and 24. What makes you happy?
Spending time with family was the top answer to that open-ended question, according to an extensive survey -- more than 100 questions asked of 1,280 people ages 13-24 -- conducted by The Associated Press on the nature of happiness among America's young people.
Next was spending time with friends, followed by time with a significant other. And good news for parents: Nearly three-quarters of young people say their relationship with their parents makes them happy.
"They're my foundation," says Kristiana St. John, 17, a high-school student from Queens in New York. "My mom tells me that even if I do something stupid, she's still going to love me no matter what. Just knowing that makes me feel very happy and blessed."
Other results are more disconcerting. While most young people are happy overall with the way their lives are going, there are racial differences: the poll shows whites to be happier than blacks and Hispanics. A lot of young people feel stress, particularly those from the middle class, and females more than males.
You might think money would be clearly tied to a general sense of happiness. But almost no one said "money" when asked what makes them happy, though people with the highest family incomes are generally happier with life. However, having highly educated parents is a stronger predictor of happiness than income.
And sex? Yes, we were getting to that. Being sexually active actually leads to less happiness among 13-17 year olds, according to the survey. If you're 18 to 24, sex might lead to more happiness in the moment, but not in general.
Overwhelmingly, young people think marriage would make them happy and want to be married some day. Most also want to have kids.
Finally, when asked to name their heroes, nearly half of respondents mentioned one or both of their parents. The winner, by a nose: Mom.
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Can money buy happiness?
Many people dream of making it big, buying a big house, design a cloth, a nicer car, but with the record number of millionaires now living right here in the United States, an age old question is now front and center--- can money really buy happiness?
The bible says the love of money is the root of all evil. So why do people want it so badly? And if you get it, can it buy you happiness?
Deal or no deal?
Money is god of this country, it’s almost too important to us, it takes over.
Be great to have lots of money, but then when you think about it, you have a different set of problems. I mean you are still paying the same bills, just will be higher.
Best selling author David Bach is a money mentor on CNBC’s The Millionaire Inside. Going from rags to richest, he says he found happiness but it wasn’t just about dollars and cents.
I think what most Americans really want is freedom. With the land of the free, but when three out of four people are living pay checked, pay checked, they don’t feel free. So I think there is a lot of opportunity for the average American to become what I call an automatic millionaire.
So folks, that means paying yourself first, saving one hour a day of your income and spending less.
In different levels of life, you have to survive all them or someone really is living pay checked, pay checked. Then you have security, where someone as you might basic means to cover. Maybe that gets six months to years where the expenses preside. Once you get past a year of expenses, you start to become free.
In the end, happiness is not as simple as making more money.
The more money you have, the more you are going to spend anyway. People don’t know how to keep their money. People don’t know to spend them wisely.
Dr. Keith Ablow is a psychiatrist; Vera Gibbons is a correspondent for CNBC. Morning to both of you.(Good morning.)
We spend so much time in our lives trying to make money. We must believe it’s gonna bring us happiness. But the research is a kind of mixed, isn’t it?
Well, the research is mixed. And I think part of the reason for that is that people acknowledge in their souls if not in their wallets that won’t make them happy. Most people don’t marry for money, most people don’t pursue careers simply for the money. There are a lot of teachers in America, who won’t trade their jobs for a sales job to make more. So we vote with our fit, in that sense.
But the problem is we see all these people are there today, with the arts, with the play, with the boats, all of these are complains, the big houses. And we think we want that too. They look happy, they have all these conditions. (It looks that way.) More millionaires, more multi-millionaires, more billionaires than ever, and they have all the toys.
Given the research what I have read, it is indicators about scare. A little more money, in other words, if you can get somebody enough money to take them from poverty to middle class, that makes people happy. But a lot more money, they go from five hundred thousand to five million, it doesn’t make you a deal.
That’s right; money is going to have the more significant impact on those low income individuals. People who have very little, they are making 20 thousand dollars. They get from 20 to 50 thousand dollars, that’s gonna to have a big impact on them.
That may, that would. Let me tell a 15 years in practice. I have had anybody come in and say, you know why am I here, I need a little more money. Right, it is all about do I feel loved, and do I love something in the world. In other words, doing work that does not speak to your heart and making lots of money is a prescription for disaster.
Yeah, you listen to surveys of the kinds of jobs that make people the happiest; they aren’t necessarily, not even close to jobs that paid the most money. They are things like teachers, social workers, firefighters, (fireman yeah) not necessarily high paid jobs.
I will still alive for my own psychologist when I was in therapy, he said, the last place you want to be is in the first class C, on a plane going somewhere you don’t want to go. Absolutely true. It’s really both feeling loved. The people come to me were in the toughest spots, I am convinced they are well loved, and they are convinced there are something in the world that they genuinely have passion love for.
Yeah, passion is another thing that makes people happy. (Yeah) health and passion.
Health, health is at the top of the list in terms of what makes you happy. Having good relationship with people, having a lot of very close personal friends, having a good marriage, these are the types of things that make you feel happy.
By the way, the health, money can help you buy happiness there. Because money can give you access to the best health care in the world. You still have to take care of ourselves. (that’s true), but it can’t make you healthier.
And if you flip that around, then you get to the core of what really makes people happy. Coz sometimes you have to take the negative to see that you are content now. So if people were to imagine, I knock on it would at this moments that their children were not well got for being. Then they will realize, you know what, I am pretty content even know my cars are year older than I’d like.
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Many people dream of making it big, buying a big house, design a cloth, a nicer car, but with the record number of millionaires now living right here in the United States, an age old question is now front and center--- can money really buy happiness?
The bible says the love of money is the root of all evil. So why do people want it so badly? And if you get it, can it buy you happiness?
Deal or no deal?
Money is god of this country, it’s almost too important to us, it takes over.
Be great to have lots of money, but then when you think about it, you have a different set of problems. I mean you are still paying the same bills, just will be higher.
Best selling author David Bach is a money mentor on CNBC’s The Millionaire Inside. Going from rags to richest, he says he found happiness but it wasn’t just about dollars and cents.
I think what most Americans really want is freedom. With the land of the free, but when three out of four people are living pay checked, pay checked, they don’t feel free. So I think there is a lot of opportunity for the average American to become what I call an automatic millionaire.
So folks, that means paying yourself first, saving one hour a day of your income and spending less.
In different levels of life, you have to survive all them or someone really is living pay checked, pay checked. Then you have security, where someone as you might basic means to cover. Maybe that gets six months to years where the expenses preside. Once you get past a year of expenses, you start to become free.
In the end, happiness is not as simple as making more money.
The more money you have, the more you are going to spend anyway. People don’t know how to keep their money. People don’t know to spend them wisely.
Dr. Keith Ablow is a psychiatrist; Vera Gibbons is a correspondent for CNBC. Morning to both of you.(Good morning.)
We spend so much time in our lives trying to make money. We must believe it’s gonna bring us happiness. But the research is a kind of mixed, isn’t it?
Well, the research is mixed. And I think part of the reason for that is that people acknowledge in their souls if not in their wallets that won’t make them happy. Most people don’t marry for money, most people don’t pursue careers simply for the money. There are a lot of teachers in America, who won’t trade their jobs for a sales job to make more. So we vote with our fit, in that sense.
But the problem is we see all these people are there today, with the arts, with the play, with the boats, all of these are complains, the big houses. And we think we want that too. They look happy, they have all these conditions. (It looks that way.) More millionaires, more multi-millionaires, more billionaires than ever, and they have all the toys.
Given the research what I have read, it is indicators about scare. A little more money, in other words, if you can get somebody enough money to take them from poverty to middle class, that makes people happy. But a lot more money, they go from five hundred thousand to five million, it doesn’t make you a deal.
That’s right; money is going to have the more significant impact on those low income individuals. People who have very little, they are making 20 thousand dollars. They get from 20 to 50 thousand dollars, that’s gonna to have a big impact on them.
That may, that would. Let me tell a 15 years in practice. I have had anybody come in and say, you know why am I here, I need a little more money. Right, it is all about do I feel loved, and do I love something in the world. In other words, doing work that does not speak to your heart and making lots of money is a prescription for disaster.
Yeah, you listen to surveys of the kinds of jobs that make people the happiest; they aren’t necessarily, not even close to jobs that paid the most money. They are things like teachers, social workers, firefighters, (fireman yeah) not necessarily high paid jobs.
I will still alive for my own psychologist when I was in therapy, he said, the last place you want to be is in the first class C, on a plane going somewhere you don’t want to go. Absolutely true. It’s really both feeling loved. The people come to me were in the toughest spots, I am convinced they are well loved, and they are convinced there are something in the world that they genuinely have passion love for.
Yeah, passion is another thing that makes people happy. (Yeah) health and passion.
Health, health is at the top of the list in terms of what makes you happy. Having good relationship with people, having a lot of very close personal friends, having a good marriage, these are the types of things that make you feel happy.
By the way, the health, money can help you buy happiness there. Because money can give you access to the best health care in the world. You still have to take care of ourselves. (that’s true), but it can’t make you healthier.
And if you flip that around, then you get to the core of what really makes people happy. Coz sometimes you have to take the negative to see that you are content now. So if people were to imagine, I knock on it would at this moments that their children were not well got for being. Then they will realize, you know what, I am pretty content even know my cars are year older than I’d like.
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Money might not buy you love, but it might be able to buy you happiness. Research by two US economists suggests that richer countries are happier than poorer ones and that as countries get richer their inhabitants become happier.
Conventional wisdom of the past three decades held that higher national gross domestic product often did not translate into a greater overall sense of wellbeing.
This view, known as the Easterlin Paradox after a 1974 paper by economist Richard Easterlin, inspired some calls for governments to shift their focus away from increasing GDP.
At the beginning of this year, French president Nicolas Sarkozy announced an effort to find a new measure for GDP that took a greater account of quality of life.
But a paper by Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers, economists at the Wharton business school at the University of Pennsylvania, argues that the Easterlin Paradox is not true.
Prof Wolfers said their dissenting conclusion partly came from improved statistics covering more countries - poor as well as rich - and a greater number of happiness surveys conducted over the past three decades.
The paper will be discussed next week at the Brookings Institution think-tank spring conference.
Prof Easterlin, who has seen the paper, said his paradox still stood. He commended his younger critics' "serious research" but they needed to focus more on happiness in specific countries, rather than "throwing all of these countries together", he said.
Prof Gary Becker, a University of Chicago Nobel prize winner, will comment on the finding at next week's conference.
"I think a lot of people found it politically comforting to find that income only mattered for the very poor and once we satisfied our basic needs it didn't matter," Prof Wolfers said.
金钱也许无法为你买来爱情,但或许能为你买来幸福。两位美国经济学家的研究显示,较富裕国家的人比较贫穷的国家更幸福,而随着国家富裕程度的提高,国民的幸福程度也会增加。
过去30年的传统观点认为,更高的国内生产总值(GDP)通常不会转化为更强的整体幸福感。
这种观点被称作伊斯特林悖论(Easterlin Paradox),是经济学家理查德•伊斯特林(R.Easterlin)在1974年的一篇论文中发现的。一些人士为此呼吁,各国政府应改变对提升GDP的关注。
今年初,法国总统尼古拉•萨科奇(Nicolas Sarkozy)宣布,将努力寻找一项新的GDP衡量指标,以便更好地反映生活质量。
但宾夕法尼亚大学(University of Pennsylvania)沃顿商学院(Wharton business school)的经济学家贝齐•史蒂文森(Betsey Stevenson)和贾斯廷•沃尔弗斯(Justin Wolfers)发表的一篇论文认为,伊斯特林悖论并不成立。
沃尔弗斯表示,他们的不同结论部分来自统计数据的改善——涵盖了更多国家,既有富国,也有穷国;以及过去30年进行了更多的幸福调查。
下周召开的布鲁金斯学会(Brookings Institution)智库春季会议将讨论这两位经济学家的论文。
读过这篇论文的伊斯特林表示,他的悖论依然成立。他称赞了两位年轻批评者的“严肃研究”,但他表示,他们需要更多地关注特定国家的幸福,而非“将所有这些国家拼凑到一起”。
芝加哥大学诺贝尔奖得主加里•贝克尔(Gary Becker)将在下周的会议上发表对以上发现的看法。
贝克尔表示:“我认为,如果发现收入只对那些极端贫困的人才重要,一旦基本需求得到满足,收入就不再重要了,许多人会从政治上感到欣慰。”
Conventional wisdom of the past three decades held that higher national gross domestic product often did not translate into a greater overall sense of wellbeing.
This view, known as the Easterlin Paradox after a 1974 paper by economist Richard Easterlin, inspired some calls for governments to shift their focus away from increasing GDP.
At the beginning of this year, French president Nicolas Sarkozy announced an effort to find a new measure for GDP that took a greater account of quality of life.
But a paper by Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers, economists at the Wharton business school at the University of Pennsylvania, argues that the Easterlin Paradox is not true.
Prof Wolfers said their dissenting conclusion partly came from improved statistics covering more countries - poor as well as rich - and a greater number of happiness surveys conducted over the past three decades.
The paper will be discussed next week at the Brookings Institution think-tank spring conference.
Prof Easterlin, who has seen the paper, said his paradox still stood. He commended his younger critics' "serious research" but they needed to focus more on happiness in specific countries, rather than "throwing all of these countries together", he said.
Prof Gary Becker, a University of Chicago Nobel prize winner, will comment on the finding at next week's conference.
"I think a lot of people found it politically comforting to find that income only mattered for the very poor and once we satisfied our basic needs it didn't matter," Prof Wolfers said.
金钱也许无法为你买来爱情,但或许能为你买来幸福。两位美国经济学家的研究显示,较富裕国家的人比较贫穷的国家更幸福,而随着国家富裕程度的提高,国民的幸福程度也会增加。
过去30年的传统观点认为,更高的国内生产总值(GDP)通常不会转化为更强的整体幸福感。
这种观点被称作伊斯特林悖论(Easterlin Paradox),是经济学家理查德•伊斯特林(R.Easterlin)在1974年的一篇论文中发现的。一些人士为此呼吁,各国政府应改变对提升GDP的关注。
今年初,法国总统尼古拉•萨科奇(Nicolas Sarkozy)宣布,将努力寻找一项新的GDP衡量指标,以便更好地反映生活质量。
但宾夕法尼亚大学(University of Pennsylvania)沃顿商学院(Wharton business school)的经济学家贝齐•史蒂文森(Betsey Stevenson)和贾斯廷•沃尔弗斯(Justin Wolfers)发表的一篇论文认为,伊斯特林悖论并不成立。
沃尔弗斯表示,他们的不同结论部分来自统计数据的改善——涵盖了更多国家,既有富国,也有穷国;以及过去30年进行了更多的幸福调查。
下周召开的布鲁金斯学会(Brookings Institution)智库春季会议将讨论这两位经济学家的论文。
读过这篇论文的伊斯特林表示,他的悖论依然成立。他称赞了两位年轻批评者的“严肃研究”,但他表示,他们需要更多地关注特定国家的幸福,而非“将所有这些国家拼凑到一起”。
芝加哥大学诺贝尔奖得主加里•贝克尔(Gary Becker)将在下周的会议上发表对以上发现的看法。
贝克尔表示:“我认为,如果发现收入只对那些极端贫困的人才重要,一旦基本需求得到满足,收入就不再重要了,许多人会从政治上感到欣慰。”
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Can money buy happiness?
Sometimes when you ask a child,what do you want to do when you grow up? they may answer, i want to be rich. Then, you would only think that the kid is just small. But, do you ever think, is that possible?
We agree, we think that money can buy happiness.
Luxuries,things that you want which will make you happy. Money, you can buy them, they make you happy.
Love, do you ever know why rich people have alot of wives? that is because people want their money. If you are rich, you will have alot of people admiring you.
Games, if you have money, you can do whatever you want.
As if, you want happiness to be unbuyable. Do you think poor people really are happy?
they actually don't, if you tell us they are happy in the inside, you are kidding yourself.
We are living in the 21st century,money is everything. When you wake up in the morning till you sleep, everything is money.
Happiness is in our everyday life, money is also, so what do you think?
MONEY CAN BUY HAPPINESS!!!
Sometimes when you ask a child,what do you want to do when you grow up? they may answer, i want to be rich. Then, you would only think that the kid is just small. But, do you ever think, is that possible?
We agree, we think that money can buy happiness.
Luxuries,things that you want which will make you happy. Money, you can buy them, they make you happy.
Love, do you ever know why rich people have alot of wives? that is because people want their money. If you are rich, you will have alot of people admiring you.
Games, if you have money, you can do whatever you want.
As if, you want happiness to be unbuyable. Do you think poor people really are happy?
they actually don't, if you tell us they are happy in the inside, you are kidding yourself.
We are living in the 21st century,money is everything. When you wake up in the morning till you sleep, everything is money.
Happiness is in our everyday life, money is also, so what do you think?
MONEY CAN BUY HAPPINESS!!!
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