FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The study, published in Nature Communications , goes on to show that the strength of the relationship between income rank and well-being varies significantly depending on the social and cultural context in which people live—and that strong civic and community life can substantially reduce it.
‘The psychological consequences of where you stand in the income distribution are not inevitable. They depend heavily on the social connectedness around you. Societies that invest in community engagement appear to substantially buffer the status anxiety that income inequality can generate,’ says the study’s first author, Edika Quispe-Torreblanca , associate professor of behavioural decision making at Leeds University Business School .
Using data from more than 90,000 people across 109 countries, the study provides one of the most comprehensive cross-national tests to date of how income shapes life satisfaction and clarifies a long-standing debate about the mechanism behind the income-wellbeing relationship.
Key findings
Drawing on six survey rounds of the Gallup World Poll (2013–2024), the researchers uncovered several striking patterns:
Why this matters
People at the bottom of the income distribution consistently report worse mental health and lower life satisfaction, but there have been competing explanations as to why this is the case, including material deprivation, social rank and income gaps. If wellbeing suffers because of material deprivation, then growth and redistribution should substantially improve population happiness. If large income gaps are the problem, compressing the top of the distribution should help. But if what matters is income rank, the above measures are unlikely to improve population wellbeing substantially.
This has implications for policymakers: efforts focused solely on raising incomes may have limited impact on well-being if people’s sense of status remains unchanged. Conversely, strengthening social capital may insulate individuals from the negative psychological effects of lower income rank.
For the general population, this suggests that the emotional impact of earning less than your neighbours is far less acute when community and belonging provide alternative sources of meaning and status.
‘Improving wellbeing requires thinking beyond income and economic growth alone. While income clearly matters, our findings show that social capital—trust, community engagement and meaningful social participation—plays a crucial role in shaping how people experience their place in society and rate the quality of their lives,’ says second author Jan-Emmanuel De Neve , professor of economics and behavioural science at Oxford University’s Saïd Business School .
‘Policies that strengthen social connection can therefore be just as important as those that raise incomes when it comes to bolstering wellbeing.’
Gordon D.A. Brown , professor of psychology at the University or Warwick , is the last author on the paper.
The paper, ‘Social status and the relationship between income rank and well-being in 109 nations,’ is published in Nature Communications .
CONTACT
For interview or comment from Jan-Emmanuel De Neve : Lisa Speckhard-Pasque, Research Communications Manager at Oxford Saïd, Elisabeth.speckhard-pasque@sbs.ox.ac.uk or 7860-948681
For comment from Edika Quispe-Torreblanca: Mia Saunders, External Communications and Campaigns Officer, University of Leeds, m.saunders@leeds.ac.uk .
Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford is a vibrant and innovative business school, embedded within a 900-year-old world leading university. We create programmes and ideas that have global impact and reach. We educate leaders, change makers and innovators across every industry and sector. Our groundbreaking research and exceptional teaching transforms individuals, who transform businesses, which transforms the world. We create impact from within.
The University of Leeds is one of the largest higher education institutions in the UK, with more than 40,000 students from about 140 different countries. We are renowned globally for the quality of our teaching and research.
We are a values-driven university, and we harness our expertise in research and education to help shape a better future for humanity, working through collaboration to tackle inequalities, achieve societal impact and drive change.
The University is a member of the Russell Group of research-intensive universities, and is a major partner in the Alan Turing, Rosalind Franklin and Royce Institutes
About the University of Warwick :
Founded in 1965, the University of Warwick is a world-leading institution known for its commitment to era-defining innovation across research and education. A connected ecosystem of staff, students and alumni, the University fosters transformative learning, interdisciplinary collaboration, and bold industry partnerships across state-of-the-art facilities in the UK and global satellite hubs. Here, spirited thinkers push boundaries, experiment, and challenge conventions to create a better world.
Nature Communications
Social status and the relationship between income rank and well-being in 109 nations