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Botelho, M. C., Mauritti, R., Craveiro, D. & Nunes, N. (2018). Well-being inequality in Europe. CIES e-Working Papers N.º 221/2018.
M. D. Botelho et al., "Well-being inequality in Europe", in CIES e-Working Papers N.º 221/2018, Lisbon, 2018
@unpublished{botelho2018_1732207802915, author = "Botelho, M. C. and Mauritti, R. and Craveiro, D. and Nunes, N.", title = "Well-being inequality in Europe", year = "2018" }
TY - EJOUR TI - Well-being inequality in Europe T2 - CIES e-Working Papers N.º 221/2018 AU - Botelho, M. C. AU - Mauritti, R. AU - Craveiro, D. AU - Nunes, N. PY - 2018 CY - Lisbon AB - This paper aims to study the consequences of social inequality in the well-being of Europeans. How individuals differ in well-being in the European space? Do categorical and distributive inequalities influence well-being? We explore the well-being inequalities in Europe building upon the OECD Framework for Measuring Well-Being and Progress. Taking European Social Survey as the main empirical source, the interplay between key distributional (education, income) and categorical (gender, social class) dimensions of social inequalities in well-being was studied, under two levels of analysis of the OECD European social space – transnational (across individuals) and national (across countries). Social inequalities on well-being scores and well-being profiles were identified. Higher education, higher income, and belonging to a more privileged social class positively influence well-being; men tend to present higher well-being than women. The four well-being profiles identified among Europeans were shown to be clearly structured by social inequalities, opposing higher- and lower- qualified socio-occupations, and males and females' life circumstances. At a country level, profiles are mostly defined in terms of volume of well-being, mainly expressing regional affiliations and asymmetries of class, income and education. The developed analysis confirms the existence of multidimensional intersections between categorical and distributive social inequalities and well-being. ER -