Economics and Well-Being in Switzerland

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Economics and Well-Being in Switzerland Alois Stutzer University of Basel Indo-Swiss Research Programme in Social Sciences! Joint Conference Bengaluru, September 8-10, 2014

Outline 1. The State of the Swiss Economy 2. Swiss Institutional Approaches 3. Approach of Swiss Researchers Economic analysis of reported subjective well-being Applications Direct democracy and reported satisfaction with life (Un-)employment and unhappiness 4. Outlook and Concluding Remarks

1. The State of the Swiss Economy 3

2. Swiss Institutional Approaches" Swiss Labor Market Institutions A flexible, generous but tough mix! 1. Limited employment protection 2. Generous unemployment benefits 3. Effectively used sanction system for non-compliance in active labor market programs 4. Strong social work norms On the basis of an integrative and open education system incl. vocational education 4

2. Swiss Institutional Approaches" Swiss Political Institutions A living constitution Rules for choosing rules: 1. Decentralized decision-making in a federal state 2. Direct democratic participation rights at all levels in the federal state 5

Swiss political institutions: Direct democracy Direct democracy is always semi direct parliament government PEOPLE Characterization: number of signatures / time restrictions issues: everything / with restrictions (a) initiatives (b) referendums - mandatory - facultative 6

Influence of direct democracy on the political process Additional possibilities for monitoring elections votes about issues More political competition issues empowerment of latent interests Outcome 7

Influence of direct democracy on the political process Additional possibilities for monitoring elections votes about issues More political competition issues empowerment of latent interests More political discourse interaction information Process 8

Empirical evidence:" Consequences of direct democracy 1. Lower public debt (CH, US) 2. Lower corruption (US) 3. Lower government expenditure (CH, US) (But: higher expenditure for public education (US)) 4. More efficient provision of public services (CH) 5. Less centralization (CH, US) 6. Higher economic performance (CH) 7. Less tax evasion (CH) 8. Better informed about politics (EU, CH) 9

Outline 1. The State of the Swiss Economy 2. Swiss Institutional Approaches 3. Approach of Swiss Researchers Economic analysis of reported subjective well-being (SWB) a) SWB as a concept in economic research How can subjective well-being be measured? Why is there a need for the economic study of subjective wellbeing? b) Determinants of individual well-being 4. Outlook and Concluding Remarks 10

a) Measuring subjective well-being " Survey questions about subjective well-being In general, how satisfied are you with your life? Please answer on the basis of the following scale, 0 means not at all satisfied and 10 means completely satisfied. not at all satisfied completely satisfied 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Source: Swiss Household Panel (1999-) 11

Satisfaction with life" (Survey in Switzerland, 2012) 50% Fraction Share of of Respondents respondents 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 39.66% 18.04% 18.89% 12.13% 4.30% 4.94% 0.17% 0.04% 0.24% 0.51% 1.07% 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 0=not 0=gar at all nicht satisfied zufrieden 10=vollumfänglich 10=completely zufrieden satisfied Source: Swiss Household Panel (1999-) 12

Why is there a need for the economic study of subjective well-being? What is the personal well-being of people? Identification of its determinants Understanding of the psychological processes that regulate well-being Evaluation of the basic principles of the economic approach Testing of economic theories Consequences for individual behavior Recommendations / food for though " (individuals, organizations, society) 13

Previous research Starting point: research in psychlogy Pioneers in economics Easterlin (1974) Scitovsky (1976) Clark und Oswald (1994) 1 st review from an economic perspective Frey, Bruno S. und Alois Stutzer (2002). Happiness and Economics: How the Economy and Institutions Affect Human Well-Being. Princeton University Press. 14

b) Determinants of subjective well-being Disposition / Genes Sociodemographic Economy Happiness Culture & Religion Politics & Institutions 15

Unemployment and subjective well-being Is employment a burden or is unemployment even worse? 16

Unemployment and subjective well-being 17

Unemployment and subjective well-being 18

Unemployment and subjective well-being On average, unemployment reduces life satisfaction substantially Effects cannot be explained by lower net income (Clark and Oswald 1994, Winkelmann and Winkelmann 1998, Frey and" Stutzer 1999) Unemployment involves psychic costs due to a loss of status, self-esteem, personal relationships and a disciplining time structure that are related to social work norms (Clark 2003, Stutzer and Lalive 2004) that reduce SWB even after re-employment (= scarring effects) (Clark et al. 2001, Knabe and Rätzel 2011) 22

Unemployment and subjective well-being Negative consequences of unemployment on employed people Negative correlation between the level of unemployment and the SWB of employed people (Di Tella, MacCulloch and Oswald 2003) Employees in the institutional framework of the public sector are less affected by fluctuations in regional unemployment. (Luechinger, Meier and Stutzer 2010) Our interpretation: Anticipatory feelings of economic insecurity matter for individual welfare. 24

Direct democracy and subjective well-being Question: Are people s preferences better satisfied when they have a direct say in politics? Empirical approach Comparison between cantons/cities or even countries Differences in the extent of direct democratic institutions Differences in the outcomes of the political process 26

Direct democratic rights in Swiss cantons 6 5 4 3 2 1 AG AI AR BE BL BS FR GE GL GR JU LU NE NW OW SG SH SO SZ TG TI UR VD VS ZG ZH Direct democratic rights (index) 27

Direct democratic rights and life satisfaction across Swiss cantons, 1992-94 9.60 9.20 8.80 8.40 8.00 7.60 1 2 3 4 5 6 Direct democratic rights (index) Average life satisfaction in a canton 28

Satisfaction with life in Switzerland (part 1) Marginal effect (index = 10) (a) Socio-demographic variables age 29 and younger reference group age 30 39-0.027 age 40 49-0.003 age 50 59-0.027 age 60 69 0.073** age 70 79 0.106** age 80 and older 0.099** men reference group women 0.015 Swiss reference group foreigner -0.091** low level of education reference group medium level of education 0.039** high level of education 0.042* 29

Satisfaction with life in Switzerland (part 2) marginal effect (index = 10) couples without children reference group single women -0.083** single men -0.057* couples with children -0.023 single parent -0.113** other private household -0.042 collective household -0.124** employed reference group self-employed 0.025 unemployed -0.211** homemaker 0.043* other employment status -0.044(*) 30

Satisfaction with life in Switzerland (part 3) marginal effect (index = 10) (b) Equivalence income - less than CHF 2'000 reference group - CHF 2 000 3 000 0.029* - CHF 3 000 4 000 0.050** - CHF 4 000 5 000 0.092** - CHF 5 000 and more 0.068** (c) Institutional variable Direct democratic rights 0.028** Number of observations 6137 Significance level: * 0.01 < p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01. Data source: Leu, Burri und Priester (1997). Source: Bruno S. Frey and Alois Stutzer (2000). Happiness, Economy and Institutions. Economic Journal 110(466): 918-938. 31

Outcome and process utility of" direct democracy in Switzerland Foreigners marginal effect (index=10) Swiss marginal effect (index=10) (a) Socio-demogr. variables yes yes (b) Income yes yes (c) Institutional variable Direct democratic rights 0.010 0.034** Number of observations 743 5391 Significance level: * 0.01 < p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01. Data source: Leu, Burri und Priester (1997). 32

Outlook and Concluding Remarks Swiss Approaches to Economics and Well-Being Politics Labor Market Institutions matter! Research on subjective wellbeing Direct democracy Federalism Outcome and process utility of direct democracy Education Flexicurity Benefit sanctions Social work norms Unemployment: primary source of unhappiness 33

Outlook and Concluding Remarks Further applications using SWB data as a methodological approach Comparative institutional happiness research Political participation rights for foreigners Policy evaluation Welfare consequences of a more or less generous unemployment insurance system Welfare consequences of tobacco control policies Test of the assumptions of the rational choice paradigm (Mis-)prediction of future utility (after major life events) 34