The idea that happiness is a genetic trait influenced by early life experiences has been challenged by a German study. It found that feelings of happiness and well being respond to external factors such as healthy lifestyle, religion and working hours.
Lead author, Associate Professor Bruce Headey of the Melbourne Institute at the University of Melbourne, says the findings suggest genes only account for around 50 percent of wellbeing, with external factors accounting for the rest.
The researchers used data gathered by the German Socio-Economic Panel Survey (SOEP), interviewed more than 60,000 people aged 16 years or older, every year between 1984 and 2008.
A large numbers of the participants reported substantial and apparently permanent changes in satisfaction, or happiness, indicating that set-point theory has significant flaws, reports ABC Science.
The dominant theory in psychology has been the set-point theory, which holds that long-term happiness in adults is essentially stable, or has a set-point, relying on genetic factors, including personality traits moulded and expressed early in life.
Set-point theory has long caused consternation among economists. At its core, it suggests that because happiness levels are both innate and unique to each individual, and there is little point in intervening in people's lives on either micro or macro levels, such as through economic policy, which would have little if any long term effect.
This suggests economists would be better off measuring happiness - also known as subjective utility - indirectly by looking at consumption and leisure choices.
Source:MedIndia
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