Religiosity and Subjective Well-Being Among Old People Evidence from a Transitional Country
Using data from the 2011 Vietnam National Aging Survey, we examined
whether religion is associated with subjective well-being (i.e.
happiness or life satisfaction) among old people in Vietnam. Our
regression analysis provided the first evidence that some religious
affiliations are negatively related to happiness. Buddhists and
Caodaists are less happy than their non-religious counterparts, even
after controlling for several household and individual attributes.
However, this negative association does not hold for Christians. This
finding is robust to the choice of key covariates and specification of
econometric models. Our finding supports the hypothesis that religiosity
tends to be linked with unhappiness in transitional countries possibly
because in these countries those who are religious often consist
disproportionately of new, relatively unhappy recruits.
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