Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/59172
Title: Explaining differences in subjective well-being across 33 nations using multilevel models : universal personality, cultural relativity, and national income
Authors: Cheng, Cecilia
Cheung, Mike W.-L.
Montasem, Alex
Falzon, Ruth
Authors: International Network ofWell-Being Studies
Keywords: Well-being -- Malta
National income -- Malta
Well-being
National income
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Citation: Cheng, C., Cheung, M. W. L., Montasem, A., & International Network of Well‐Being Studies. (2016). Explaining differences in subjective well‐being across 33 nations using multilevel models: Universal personality, cultural relativity, and national income. Journal of Personality, 84(1), 46-58.
Abstract: This multinational study simultaneously tested three prominent hypotheses—universal disposition, cultural relativity, and livability—that explained differences in subjective well-being across nations.We performed multilevel structural equation modeling to examine the hypothesized relationships at both individual and cultural levels in 33 nations. Participants were 6,753 university students (2,215 men; 4,403 women; 135 did not specify), and the average age of the entire sample was 20.97 years (SD = 2.39). Both individual- and cultural-level analyses supported the universal disposition and cultural relativity hypotheses by revealing significant associations of subjective well-being with Extraversion, Neuroticism, and independent self-construal. In addition, interdependent self-construal was positively related to life satisfaction at the individual level only, whereas aggregated negative affect was positively linked with aggregate levels of Extraversion and interdependent self-construal at the cultural level only. Consistent with the livability hypothesis, gross national income (GNI) was related to aggregate levels of negative affect and life satisfaction.There was also a quadratic relationship between GNI and aggregated positive affect. Our findings reveal that universal disposition, cultural self-construal, and national income can elucidate differences in subjective well-being, but the multilevel analyses advance the literature by yielding new findings that cannot be identified in studies using individual-level analyses alone.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/59172
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