Study Layard et al. (2013): study GB 2004
- Public
- 34 aged, United Kingdom, followed from childhood, 2004
- Survey name
- UK-British Cohort Study
- Sample
- Respondents
- N = 8868
- Non Response
- Assessment
- Interview: face-to-face
Correlate
- Authors's Label
- Educational achievement
- Our Classification
-
-
- Error Estimates
- s.e.=.01
- Remarks
- Data set using imputation for missing variables.
- Operationalization
- 0.750 Phd or masters
0.486 Degree:
0.237 A level:
0.188 GCSE:
0.043 CSE
0.000 No qual
Values taken from a regression of male log full-time earnings on "having a family", childhood emotion and conduct and 5 education dummies.
Observed Relation with Happiness
- Income
- Employed
- Good conduct
- Has partner
- Self-perceived health(at age 26)
- Emotional health(at age 26)
- Intellectual performance (5,10,16)
- Good conduct (5,10,16)
- Family economic
- Family psychosocial
- Gender (female)