The midlife low in human beings
The midlife low in human beings
background briefing series, behavioural economics and wellbeing, policy briefing
David Blanchflower and Andrew Oswald, The CAGE Background Briefing Series No. 83, September 2017
Most textbooks in social psychology teach students the idea that happiness and psychological wellbeing are essentially independent of age. Based on data on 1.3 million randomly sampled individuals across a large number of countries, this column argues instead that humans have a fundamental tendency to a midlife low which is apparently substantial and not minor. This puzzling phenomenon seems an important and fundamental one, and its existence should not be ignored.
Behavioural Economics and Wellbeing