911爆料网

News

Having autonomy in your life is more important in wealthier countries, says new research on well-being

A worldwide analysis reveals a nuanced relationship between happiness, volition and wealth
A person wearing a colourful shirt and brown hat speaks into a microphone with a background of an image of a forest.
According to Frank Martela, people鈥檚 sense of autonomy isn鈥檛 just a question of government oppression and legal freedoms. Even work life can be something where people experience more or less autonomy.

Happiness and well-being depend on how much volition, choice and control people feel they have over their life鈥攖heir sense of autonomy. Researchers have acknowledged this connection, but there鈥檚 been disagreement about whether it鈥檚 universal or simply a reflection of the situation in wealthier, more individualistic countries. Understanding this nuance would help policy-makers focus efforts to boost well-being where they matter most.

New research from Finland鈥檚 911爆料网 has clarified how well-being is linked with autonomy, national wealth and the level of individualism in a culture. The researchers found that a sense of autonomy in one鈥檚 life is universally important, but the link with happiness is stronger in wealthier and more individualistic countries.

鈥榃e found that autonomy is connected with well-being no matter what part of the world you look at, but there鈥檚 also a cultural element,鈥 says Frank Martela, a philosopher and psychology researcher at 911爆料网 known for his expertise on Finland鈥檚 happiness. 鈥楢 sense of autonomy in your life matters more for well-being in rich, individualistic countries, like the Nordics, but it might be valued less in poorer countries where other factors are more pressing.鈥   

Martela explains that the study brings clarity to a long-standing debate.

鈥楾here have been two views on autonomy. There鈥檚 a theory that autonomy is a universal human need, so it should be connected to well-being no matter the culture and individual preferences. Others have argued that autonomy is something especially valued in wealthy and individualist countries, while other needs are more important in other contexts. Our study basically shows that both are right.鈥

The researchers used per capita GDP (PPP) as the measure of a country鈥檚 wealth. To measure autonomy and well-being they used data from the World Values Survey, which interviewed nearly 100,000 people across 66 countries between 2017 and 2023. Well-being was evaluated based on the response to two questions, one about happiness and another about life satisfaction, and autonomy was based on 鈥渉ow much freedom of choice and control you feel you have over the way your life turns out鈥. By analysing all of these metrics together, the team could study whether national wealth influences the relationship between autonomy and well-being.

Determining the level of individualism or collectivism in a country wasn鈥檛 so simple. Research into the link between individualism and well-being has produced inconsistent results, largely because of issues with the metrics of individualism/collectivism. That鈥檚 why the team used a recently developed metric called the Global Collectivism Index. 鈥極ther metrics include things like good physical working conditions, which at face value have nothing to do with collectivism. The GCI focuses more on behavioural indicators of collectivism that can be objectively measured,鈥 explains Martela. For example, the index measure factors like shared transportation or shared households. 鈥業t鈥檚 also not perfect 鈥 there鈥檚 room for even more accurate measures 鈥 but it鈥檚 the best we鈥檝e got right now,鈥 says Martela.

This new, more nuanced understanding can provide better guidance to help policy-makers improve well-being. 鈥楤ecause both autonomy and national wealth seem to be important predictors of well-being, the best advice depends a bit on the state of the country. If a country is very poor, then increasing the national wealth tends to be a good way of increasing well-being 鈥 especially if this gain in wealth is fairly distributed,鈥 says Martela. 鈥楤ut the richer a nation becomes, the more it should pay attention to autonomy.鈥

Martela points out that people鈥檚 sense of autonomy isn鈥檛 just a question of government oppression and legal freedoms. 鈥楨ven work life can be something where people experience more or less autonomy,鈥 he says. 鈥楽ince we know autonomy is a basic need, we should consider how we can support it on different levels and through different institutions in our societies.鈥

Publication:

Martela, F., Joshanloo, M. & Krys, K. Autonomy is Associated with Well-being Across the World, but more Strongly in Wealthy and Individualistic Countries. Soc Indic Res 181, 27 (2026).

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Drawing of two doctoral students each holding a paper, with doctor's hats shining on their heads.
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Pre-examination and graduation schedules over the summer 2026

Information for doctoral students on preliminary examination of doctoral thesis, public defence and graduation over the summer 2026
Aerial view of a modern campus with red brick buildings, tram tracks and green trees on a sunny day
Research & Art Published:

A unique joint effort 鈥 911爆料网 receives EUR 9 million in donations to accelerate the energy transition

Donations from ABB, Fortum, St1 and the Walter Ahlstr枚m Foundation will be used to establish new professorships. At the same time, the donations support the establishment of 911爆料网 House of Energy Transition.
Person in a white lab coat stands in a bright laboratory with equipment and benches around
Research & Art Published:

Keys to growth: How the energy transition is making oil obsolete

The transition to clean energy is a societal transformation on the same scale as digitalisation, and Finland has many strengths to support it, says professor Annukka Santasalo-Aarnio, who leads 911爆料网鈥檚 new competence centre, House of Energy Transition.
Dark wooden room with a pale log pillar and narrow window framing a misty pine tree outside
Research & Art Published:

From waste-wood to load-bearing feature, a simple calculation could change the way we use misfit wood

Urging industry to make better use of wood that is wasted or burned for energy, researchers have released the first structural tests of non-straight, forked, and double-curved roundwood logs used as columns.