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Published September 07, 2010, 12:00 AM

New report finds money can buy you happiness, to a point

WASHINGTON — They say money can’t buy happiness. They’re wrong.

By: Randolph E. Schmid, The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — They say money can’t buy happiness. They’re wrong.

At least up to a point.

For folks making less than that, said Angus Deaton, an economist at the Center for Health and Wellbeing at Princeton University, “Stuff is so in your face it’s hard to be happy. It interferes with your enjoyment.”

Deaton and Daniel Kahneman reviewed surveys of 450,000 Americans conducted in 2008 and 2009 for the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index that included questions on people’s day-to-day happiness and their overall life satisfaction.

Happiness got better as income rose but the effect leveled out at $75,000, Deaton said.

On the other hand, their overall sense of success or well-being continued to rise as their earnings grew beyond that point.

“Giving people more income beyond 75K is not going to do much for their daily mood ... but it is going to make them feel they have a better life,” Deaton said in an interview.

Not surprisingly, someone who moves from a $100,000-a-year job to one paying $200,000 realizes an improved sense of success. That doesn’t necessarily mean they are happier day to day, Deaton said.

Kahneman, a Nobel Prize winning psychologist, and Deaton undertook the study to learn more about economic growth and policy.

Some have questioned the value of growth to individuals, and Deaton said they were far from definitively resolving that question.

The research was supported by the Gallup Organization and the National Institute on Aging.

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