The Happy Farmer: Self-Employment and Subjective Well-Being in Rural Vietnam

Abstract

Using survey data from rural Vietnam, this paper documents a statistically significant, positive effect of self-employment in farming on subjective well-being. Wage workers are less happy than farmers across a range of different types of wage jobs. These results suggest that structural transformation is associated with a psychological cost, which may contribute to explaining earnings gaps between sectors and types of employment. We also investigate other determinants of happiness, such as income, age, gender, children, ethnicity, marital status, schooling, landlessness, migration, social networks and shocks. Our results from rural areas in a dynamic developing country context are remarkably similar to findings about subjective well-being from developed countries, with entirely different cultures and levels of economic development.

Citation

Markussen, T.; Fibæk, M.; Nguyen, D. The Happy Farmer: Self-Employment and Subjective Well-Being in Rural Vietnam. UNU-WIDER, Helsinki, Finland (2014) 31 pp. ISBN 978-92-9230-829-2 [WIDER Working Paper No. 2014/108]

The Happy Farmer: Self-Employment and Subjective Well-Being in Rural Vietnam

Published 1 January 2014