Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Life is good, say 90% of Americans

By Paul Ausick

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When nine out of ten Americans are satisfied with how things are shaping up in their personal lives in the face of an impeachmen­t trial, a serious virus outbreak that appears to get worse every day and rising global temperatur­es, perhaps it’s a good time to reevaluate how people make judgments about their personal lives and how news headlines reflect the country’s mood.

According to Gallup’s latest Mood of the Nation poll, conducted between January 2 and 15, Americans’ satisfacti­on with their personal lives has reached a 40-year high.

The same poll recorded that confidence in the U.S. economy has reached a 20-year high.

Being satisfied, however, is not the same as being happy. In another Gallup survey completed a month earlier, Americans were asked how happy they were. According to the results, 86% of Americans are either “very” or “fairly” happy. Surprising­ly, perhaps, that’s the “lowest overall percentage happy Gallup has recorded in periodic readings over 71 years and is only the fifth time happiness has dipped below the 90% mark in 23 readings since 1948.”

According to Gallup, “Household income, political party affiliatio­n and marital status are associated with the largest subgroup difference­s in Americans’ satisfacti­on with their personal life.”

About 95% of Americans who live in highincome households, are married and identify as Republican­s say they are satisfied with their lives. About three of four in each grouping are “very satisfied.”

At the other end of the spectrum, 80% of Americans with household incomes of less than $40,000 report being “satisfied” and 54% of those say they are “very satisfied.”

The widest difference appears to be based on political affiliatio­n. Fully 80% of Republican­s are “very satisfied” with their personal lives, compared with 56% of Democrats. Just 14% of Republican­s compared with 30% of Democrats are “somewhat satisfied.” Combined, 94% of Republican­s and 86% of Democrats are satisfied with their personal lives.

Two-thirds of white Americans are “very satisfied” compared to 59% of non-whites. Nearly a quarter (24%) of whites also report being “very dissatisfi­ed,” trailing only women, 26% of whom say they are “very dissatisfi­ed.” Just 4% of all those surveyed were “very dissatisfi­ed” overall and another 6% said they were “somewhat dissatisfi­ed.”

Gallup noted, “Americans’ heightened satisfacti­on with their personal life comes as confidence in the U.S. economy and their personal finances are also at long-term or record highs.”

For those in the 10% of Americans who are dissatisfi­ed with their lives, consider Emerson’s observatio­n, “The first wealth is health.” (24/7 Wall St.com)

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