AI Article Synopsis

  • There is strong evidence that higher income is generally associated with higher self-esteem, but the relationship within individuals over time is less understood.
  • A study using 4-year data from over 4,000 Dutch adults found that while higher income leads to increased self-esteem, the reverse—self-esteem leading to higher income—was less supported.
  • The results suggest that self-esteem increases are primarily influenced by prior income increases, and these findings were consistent across various demographics like gender, age, and education.

Article Abstract

There is robust evidence that people with higher incomes tend to have higher self-esteem, but little is known about how changes in income and self-esteem are related within individuals. Some theories predict that increased earnings lead to higher self-esteem, others that increased self-esteem leads to higher earnings, and still others that there should be no within-person associations between these variables. We tested these theories in 4-year longitudinal data from more than 4,000 adult participants from a Dutch representative sample. Results indicated significant between-person associations between income and self-esteem, consistent with prior research. Within-person effects suggested that increases in self-esteem are a function of previous increases in income more than the other way around. These links held when analyses controlled for employment status, and they generalized across gender, age, and educational background. Overall, the findings provide evidence for theories that consider self-esteem as both a source and a consequence of personal earnings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09567976231185129DOI Listing

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