More Is Still Not Enough—What Is Necessary and Sufficient for Happiness?
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Date
2025
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MDPI
Abstract
Happiness is defined as well-being and contentment with life. The growing imperative
to evaluate well-being beyond economic growth alone has led to the formulation of holistic
indices that better reflect quality of life and sustainable development goals. This has
resulted in the emergence of the Happiness Score (HS), which adopts a more holistic and
human-centred perspective on development and well-being. The present study takes the
Happiness Score as a basis for the identification of some of the main determinants of
happiness in an empirical and data-driven perspective. To this end, data from 145 countries
was analysed, using statistical methodologies such as Generalised Linear Models (GLM),
Principal Component Analysis (PCA), fuzzy set Qualitative Comparison Analysis (fsQCA)
and the decision tree machine learning approach. A range of indices were considered
to translate the reality of countries in different socio-economic dimensions, the level of
development of each country, and the continent to which it belongs. The African continent
demonstrates substantial disparities across virtually all variables and is frequently associated
with the most unfavourable values for each index. The indicators that exerted the
most profound influence on happiness were identified as the freedom to make life choices,
literacy rate, and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita. These results inform policy
strategies aligned with sustainable development, emphasising that enhancing happiness
requires multidimensional action beyond economic indicators—particularly in low- and
middle-income countries.
Description
Keywords
hapiness, socioeconomic indicators, sustainable development, generalised linear models, fsQCA, machine learning decision tree approaches
Citation
Kamińska, J.A.; Dionísio, A.; Infante, P.; Carrilho, R. (2025). “More Is Still Not Enough—What Is Necessary and Sufficient for Happiness?”, Sustainability, 17 (13), 6121. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17136121