Recent research has shown that the degree to which people feel they are in control of their lives is an important correlate
of individual happiness, where those that feel more in control are also found to be systematically happier. In turn, the economic
sources of perceived life control are only insignificantly established in the relevant literature. The present paper employs
individual data from the most recent version of the World Value Survey, covering the period from 1981 to 2013, to establish
the macro-determinants of individual life control. We find that living in a country with high overall economic freedom is
a major determinant of feeling in control of one's own life. The effect is very similar for individuals in high and low income
countries, while the impact of democracy is negligible in both cases. Interacting relative income with economic freedom, we
find that – contrary to conventional wisdom – it is by far the lower income groups that derive the biggest gain of perceived
life control from living in a country with comparatively high economic freedom.
Keywords:Locus of control, Economic institutions, Well-Being, Democracy
Forschungsbereich:Makroökonomie und öffentliche Finanzen