The name is absent



25

References

Blanchflower, D., and A. Oswald (2004): “Well-being over time in Britain and the USA”,
Journal of Public Economics 88, 1359-1386.

Bockerman, P., and P. Ilmakunnas (2009): “Unemployment and Self-Assessed Health:
Evidence from Panel Data”,
Health Economics 18, 161-179.

Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1990): Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience, New York:
HarperCollins.

Csikszentmihalyi, M., and Hunter, J. (2003): “Happiness in everyday life: the uses of
experience sampling”,
Journal of Happiness Studies 4, pp. 185-99.

Csikszentmihalyi, M., and R. Larson (1987): “Validity and reliability of the experience
sampling method”,
Journal ofNervous and Mental Disease 175, 526-536.

Clark, A., and A. Oswald (1994): “Unhappiness and Unemployment“, Economic Journal 104,
648-659.

Clark, A., Y. Georgellis, and P. Sanfey (2001): “Scarring: The Psychological Impact of Past
Unemployment”,
Economica 68, 221-41.

Clark, A. (2003): “Unemployment as a Social Norm: Psychological Evidence from Panel
Data”,
Journal ofLabor Economics, 21, 2, 323-351.

Clark, A., A. Knabe, and S. Ratzel (2008): Boon or Bane? Well-being, Others’
Unemployment, and Labor-Market Risk
, CESifo Working Paper No. 2501, Munich.

Clark, A., E. Diener, Y. Georgellis, R. Lucas (2008): “Lags and Leads in Life Satisfaction: A
Test of the Baseline Hypothesis”,
Economic Journal 118, F222-F243.

Deaton A. (2008): “Income, Health, and Well-Being around the World: Evidence from the
Gallup World Poll”,
Journal ofEconomic Perspectives 22,(2) Spring, 53-72.

Diener, E., R. Emmons, R. Larsen, and S. Griffin (1985): “The Satisfaction With Life Scale”,
Journal ofPersonality Assessment 49, 71-75.

Di Tella, R., R. MacCulloch, and A. Oswald (2001): “Preferences over Inflation and
Unemployment: Evidence from Surveys of Happiness”,
American Economic Review 91,
335-341.

Dolan, P., and D. Kahneman (2008): “Interpretations of utility and their implications for the
valuation of health”,
Economic Journal 118, 215-234.

Ferrer-i-Carbonell, A., and P. Frijters (2004): “How important is methodology for the
estimates of the determinants of happiness?”,
Economic Journal 114, 641-659.

Frey, B., and A. Stutzer (2000): “Happiness, Economy and Institutions”, Economic Journal
110, 918-938.

Frey, B., and A. Stutzer (2002): “What Can Economists Learn from Happiness Research?”,
Journal ofEconomic Literature 40, 402-435.

Gerlach, K., and G. Stephan (1996): “A paper on unhappiness and unemployment in
Germany”,
Economics Letters 52 (3), 325-330.

Helliwell, J.F., and R.D. Putnam (2005): The social context of well-being, Chapter 17, in:
F.Huppert, N. Beylis, and B. Keverne,
The Science of Well-Being, Oxford University
Press.

Kahneman, D, P. P. Wakker, and R. Sarin (1997): “Back to Bentham? Explorations of
Experienced Utility”,
The Quarterly Journal of Economics 112, 375-405.

Kahneman, D. (1999): “Objective Happiness”, in: D. Kahneman, E. Diener and N. Schwarz
(eds.):
Well-Being. The Foundations of Hedonic Psychology, Russsel Sage Foundation
New York, 3-25.

Kahneman, D., A. B. Krueger, D. A. Schkade, N. Schwarz and A. A. Stone (2004a): “A
Survey Method for Characterizing Daily Life Experience: The Day Reconstruction
Method”,
Science. 306:5702, pp. 1776-780.

Kahneman, D., A. B. Krueger, D. Schkade, N. Schwarz and A. Stone (2004b): “Toward
National Well-Being Accounts”,
American Economic Review 94, 429-434.

Kahneman, D., A. B. Krueger, D. A. Schkade, N. Schwarz and A. A. Stone (2004c): The Day
Reconstruction Method (DRM). Instrument Documentation
, Supporting Online Material
for Kahneman et al. (2004a),
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/data/306/5702/1776/DC1/1.



More intriguing information

1. Detecting Multiple Breaks in Financial Market Volatility Dynamics
2. Consumer Networks and Firm Reputation: A First Experimental Investigation
3. Self-Help Groups and Income Generation in the Informal Settlements of Nairobi
4. The name is absent
5. The Impact of Individual Investment Behavior for Retirement Welfare: Evidence from the United States and Germany
6. Group cooperation, inclusion and disaffected pupils: some responses to informal learning in the music classroom
7. Environmental Regulation, Market Power and Price Discrimination in the Agricultural Chemical Industry
8. Foreign direct investment in the Indian telecommunications sector
9. Using Surveys Effectively: What are Impact Surveys?
10. Orientation discrimination in WS 2