Showing posts with label Survey Shows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Survey Shows. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Church-goers tend to be happier people






Religious people are more satisfied with their lives than nonbelievers, but a new study finds it's not a relationship with God that makes the devout happy. Instead, the satisfaction boost may come from closer ties to earthly neighbors.

According to a study published today (Dec. 7) in the journal American Sociological Review, religious people gain life satisfaction thanks to social networks they build by attending religious services. The results apply to Catholics and mainline and evangelical Protestants. The number of Jews, Mormons, Muslims and people of other religions interviewed was too small to draw conclusions about those populations, according to study researcher Chaeyoon Lim, a sociologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"We show that [life satisfaction] is almost entirely about the social aspect of religion, rather than the theological or spiritual aspect of religion," Lim told LiveScience. "We found that people are more satisfied with their lives when they go to church, because they build a social network within their congregation."

Happiness is a crowded pew
Many studies have uncovered a link between religion and life satisfaction, but all of the research faced a "chicken-and-egg problem," Lim said. Does religion make people happy, or do happy people become religious? And if religion is the cause of life satisfaction, what is responsible — spirituality, social contacts, or some other aspect of religion ?

Lim and his colleague, Harvard researcher Robert Putnam, tackled both questions with their study. In 2006, they contacted a nationally representative sample of 3,108 American adults via phone and asked them questions about their religious activities, beliefs and social networks. In 2007, they called the same group back and got 1,915 of them to answer the same batch of questions again.

The surveys showed that across all creeds, religious people were more satisfied than non-religious people. According to the data, about 28 percent of people who attended a religious service weekly were "extremely satisfied" with their lives, compared with 19.6 percent of people who never attended services.

But the satisfaction couldn't be attributed to factors like individual prayer, strength of belief, or subjective feelings of God's love or presence. Instead, satisfaction was tied to the number of close friends people said they had in their religious congregation. People with more than 10 friends in their congregation were almost twice as satisfied with life as people with no friends in their congregation.

Are church friends special?
Importantly, Lim said, the study suggested a causal link between religion and life satisfaction: People who had started attending church more often between the 2006 and 2007 surveys became happier. Again, the happiness was explained entirely by a boost in close church friendships.



"We think it has something to do with the fact that you meet a group of close friends on a regular basis, together as a group, and participate in certain activities that are meaningful to the group," Lim said. "At the same time, they share a certain social identity, a sense of belonging to a moral faith community. The sense of belonging seems to be the key to the relationship between church attendance and life satisfaction."

While a higher number of secular close friendships were also associated with life satisfaction, church friendships seem to involve something that lifts satisfaction even more, Lim said. Additional research by Lim and Putnam, reported in the book "American Grace: How Religion Divides Us and Unites Us" (Simon & Schuster, 2010), has found the religious propensity toward charity and volunteerism to be connected with close church friendship, as well.

Theoretically, Lim said, belonging to a secular friend group that engages in meaningful activities and shares a social identity might also boost life satisfaction. The researchers plan to carry out a third round of surveys with the same group of participants in 2011 in which they hope to gather data on secular friendship groups.

Read More

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40557983/ns/health-behavior/

Monday, November 22, 2010

Lack of Hiring to Restrain U.S. Economy in 2011, Survey Shows




The economy in the U.S. will fail to strengthen in 2011 as companies limit hiring and consumers curb spending, a survey showed.

Gross domestic product will increase 2.6 percent next year after growing 2.7 percent in 2010, according to the median forecast of 51 economists surveyed by the National Association for Business Economics from Oct. 21 to Nov. 4.

“Growth is expected to be moderate,” Richard Wobbekind, president of the group and associate dean of the Leeds School of Business at the University of Colorado-Boulder, said in a statement. “Panelists remain concerned about high levels of federal debt, a continuing high level of unemployment, increased business regulation and rising commodity prices.”

A diminishing need to replenish inventories, the winding down of government stimulus and households’ drive to pay off debt will restrain growth, the survey showed. The economists polled said the world’s largest economy will add fewer jobs than they predicted last month.

Employment next year will climb by 136,000 a month on average, down from the 153,000 they projected in October, the survey showed. This month’s canvass was completed before the Labor Department reported on Nov. 5 that employers added 151,000 workers to payrolls last month, beating the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

The unemployment rate will be 9.4 percent or higher through the middle of 2011 before dropping to 9.2 percent by the end of next year, according to economists surveyed.

Consumer spending will expand 1.7 percent in 2010 and 2.4 percent in 2011, the survey showed. Median projections in October for this year and next were 1.5 percent and 2.3 percent, respectively.

Inflation Forecast

Respondents also said inflation in 2011 will remain below the Federal Reserve’s estimates. Economists forecast the central bank’s preferred inflation gauge, the personal consumption expenditures price index excluding food and energy, will rise 1.3 percent next year after a 1.1 percent gain in 2010. Fed policy makers have a long-run inflation forecast of 1.7 percent to 2 percent, the level they see as consistent with achieving legislative mandates for maximum employment and stable prices.

About one-third of those surveyed said a Fed decision to buy more Treasury securities could diminish the risk of deflation, and another third said the action could increase the risk of “undesirable” inflation. Policy makers on Nov. 3 announced a plan to buy another $600 billion in government debt through June.

The Fed’s so-called quantitative easing program will not prevent borrowing costs from rising, the survey showed. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note will increase every quarter next year, finishing at 3.25 percent by the end of 2011. The yield at the end of the third quarter this year was 2.51 percent.

The biggest threat to the economy was “excessive federal debt,” according to those surveyed, exceeding concern over unemployment and either inflation or deflation, the report said.

The U.S. deficit will narrow to $1.1 trillion in 2011 from $1.3 trillion this year, according to the median forecast.

Read More

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-11-22/lack-of-hiring-to-limit-growth-in-u-s-next-year-economists-survey-shows.html