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Thread: People who live in small towns and rural areas are happier than everyone else, researchers say

  1. #1

    Exclamation People who live in small towns and rural areas are happier than everyone else, researchers say

    Yeah, OK, Canada, but I have no reason to believe that these results would not be the same in the US.



    People who live in small towns and rural areas are happier than everyone else, researchers say

    https://www.mysanantonio.com/news/ar...s-12922528.php

    Christopher Ingraham, The Washington Post Published 12:11 pm, Thursday, May 17, 2018

    Heaven is wide open spaces - at least, it is for most people, according to a massive new data set of happiness in Canada.

    A team of happiness researchers at the Vancouver School of Economics and McGill University recently published a working paper on the geography of well-being in Canada. They compiled 400,000 responses to a pair of national Canadian surveys, allowing them to parse out distinctions in well-being at the level of more than 1,200 communities representing the country's entire geography.

    They were able to cross-reference the well-being responses with other survey data, as well as figures from the Canadian census, to see what sorts of characteristics were associated with happiness at the community level: Are happier communities richer, for instance? Are the people there more educated? Do they spend more time in church?

    Their chief finding is a striking association between population density - the concentration of people in a given area - and happiness. When the researchers ranked all 1,215 communities by average happiness, they found that average population density in the 20 percent most miserable communities was more than eight times greater than in the happiest 20 percent of communities.

    "Life is significantly less happy in urban areas," the paper concluded.


    In the region around the city of Toronto, densely populated areas like Toronto, Hamilton and Kitchener stand out as islands of relative unhappiness in a sea of satisfaction in the hinterlands.

    The happiness measure is derived from a survey question that asks responses to rate "how satisfied" they are with their lives, on a scale from 1 to 10. Across Canada, community-level average responses to this question range from 7.04 to 8.94. This may not seem like a wide range of difference, but Canadians rarely offer self-assessments outside this range; in a typical year just five percent of Canadians rate their satisfaction below a 5, for instance.

    It's useful to think of this narrow spectrum of responses as representing the entire continuum of Canadian happiness. Hence, the study's authors note that even small differences in the absolute score are highly statistically significant.


    So what makes the happiest communities different from all the rest? Aside from fewer people, the authors found that the happiest communities had shorter commute times and less expensive housing, and that a smaller share of the population was foreign-born. They also found that people in the happiest communities are less transient than in the least happy communities, that they are more likely to attend church and that they are significantly more likely to feel a "sense of belonging" in their communities.

    It may seem contradictory that greater happiness is correlated with both lower population density (implying fewer interpersonal interactions) and a greater sense of "belonging" in one's community (implying stronger social connections). But a significant body of research shows that having a strong social network is key to well-being. Some studies indicate that small towns and rural areas are more conducive than cities to forming strong social bonds, which would explain some of the greater sense of belonging observed in the happiest Canadian communities.

    Perhaps even more surprising are the factors that don't appear to play a major role in community-level differences in happiness: average income levels and rates of unemployment and education. People may move to cities for good-paying jobs, but the Canadian study strongly suggests it's not making them any happier.

    These findings comport with similar studies done in the United States, which have revealed a "rural-urban happiness gradient:" The farther away from cities people live, the happier they tend to be.

    One important caveat in the Canadian study is that the authors aren't making any strong statements about causality: There's a clear association between low population density and reported happiness, but that doesn't mean that low population density causes happiness. A miserable city dweller who moves to the country might simply become a miserable country dweller, in other words.

    However, it's clear that there's something about small towns and rural life that's associated with greater levels of self-reported happiness among people who live in those places. The strength of the Canadian study is that it parses out these distinctions at an uncommonly fine level of geographic detail.
    “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.” - Arnold Toynbee



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  3. #2
    Aside from fewer people, the authors found that the happiest communities had shorter commute times and less expensive housing, and that a smaller share of the population was foreign-born. They also found that people in the happiest communities are less transient than in the least happy communities, that they are more likely to attend church and that they are significantly more likely to feel a "sense of belonging" in their communities.
    Wow.

    Who would have thought that?

    Small communities, with elbow room, and neighbors composed of people that are similar to you, leads to more happiness than the cosmopolitan goulash of urban life with millions of disconnected and dissimilar strangers all packed together like sardines, held together with a physiological pressure vessel of heavy handed police statism and a million rules and regulations and fatwas designed to hamstring everybody and keep them from slitting each other's throats.

  4. #3
    It is true . I am content . I can see no neighbors in summer and one empty B & B in winter .
    Do something Danke

  5. #4
    I've lived in both and was/am happy in both. I think part of it depends on your lifestyle. When I was a young party animal, I wouldn't have been happy in the sticks. As a matter of fact, I hated living out here until I had kids and had time to make friends. Now, I don't think I would be happy in the city.

    One thing about the country that always appealed to me was the privacy but it's an odd sort of privacy. No one seems to care or notice what you're doing but because you end up getting to know just about everyone (drives Mr A nuts that I can't run into a store without chatting up someone I know), people like to gossip. I wish I was half as exciting as a few of my neighbors think I am.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ron Paul View Post
    The intellectual battle for liberty can appear to be a lonely one at times. However, the numbers are not as important as the principles that we hold. Leonard Read always taught that "it's not a numbers game, but an ideological game." That's why it's important to continue to provide a principled philosophy as to what the role of government ought to be, despite the numbers that stare us in the face.
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    This intellectually stimulating conversation is the reason I keep coming here.

  6. #5
    Also of note conservatives have been happier in every poll going back to the early 70s.

    Why Conservatives Are Happier Than Liberals


    https://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/08/o...st-of-all.html

  7. #6

    Don't need a weather man to know which way the wind blows

  8. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by shakey1 View Post
    The funny part is that she assimilated into the community and he just found reasons to hate everyone and everything in the country as much as he did the city.
    Some people are happy anywhere and others make themselves miserable wherever they go.
    Never attempt to teach a pig to sing; it wastes your time and annoys the pig.

    Robert Heinlein

    Give a man an inch and right away he thinks he's a ruler

    Groucho Marx

    I love mankind…it’s people I can’t stand.

    Linus, from the Peanuts comic

    You cannot have liberty without morality and morality without faith

    Alexis de Torqueville

    Those who fail to learn from the past are condemned to repeat it.
    Those who learn from the past are condemned to watch everybody else repeat it

    A Zero Hedge comment

  9. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Swordsmyth View Post
    The funny part is that she assimilated into the community and he just found reasons to hate everyone and everything in the country as much as he did the city.
    Some people are happy anywhere and others make themselves miserable wherever they go.
    Yes. People tend to drag their problems with them.



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  11. #9
    Fresh air!

    Times Square!

  12. #10
    The gosh darn Chiggers are the problem!

  13. #11



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