Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Social Psychology Business

Working fewer hours is associated with higher life satisfaction, according to new research

by Rachel Schepke
January 10, 2023
in Business, Mental Health
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Stay informed on the latest psychology and neuroscience research—follow PsyPost on LinkedIn for daily updates and insights.

Published in Health Economics Review, a new study has found that working fewer hours is associated with higher life satisfaction, which is mediated by one’s level of health. Other factors that contribute to higher life satisfaction include social inclusion, social trust, feelings of safety, and digitalization.

One’s amount of income has an impact on their satisfaction of life. Typically, people with higher incomes report higher life satisfaction and those who have less income report lower life satisfaction. Another area of interest is the relationship between time spent working and well-being. Previous research shows that both partnered men and women report higher levels of life satisfaction and well-being when working part-time compared to working full-time. Other research suggests that time spent working is correlated with happiness.

Researcher Qinglong Shao was interested in investigating the relationship between time spent working and life satisfaction in relation to the mediating effects of health. Shao also sought to examine the effects of social inclusion social trust, feelings of safety, and digitalization on life satisfaction. Shao was also interested in the association between time spent working and level of income. Lastly, Shao investigated job satisfaction among different occupations.

Shao analyzed 18,060 responses from 10 relevant surveys that inquired about life satisfaction, working time variables, health, social inclusion, social trust, feelings of safety, digitalization, income, marital status, and other demographic information. The six different job types included in Shao’s analysis were occupations in central or local government, education and health, state-owned enterprise, private firm, self-employment, and “other” category.

Results from this study show that working fewer hours was correlated with higher life satisfaction. Shao suggests this finding may exist because people enjoy working less hours to spend time with family and have time for other commitments/responsibilities. Shao also suggests that people in European countries may enjoy working less because more of their earnings are taken out of their paychecks and given to the government to help support the welfare system.

Shao also found that working part-time positively affected health and positive health was associated with greater life satisfaction. Life satisfaction was also positively correlated with trust, social inclusion, and feelings of safety. Regarding income, Shao found that income was positively correlated with life satisfaction, implying that those who work part-time and report higher life satisfaction are earning higher income.

In alignment with previous research, Shao also found that life satisfaction and happiness increased with age. However, gender has a negative effect on life satisfaction in which males are less likely to be happy than females. Shao found that workers in private firms prefer to work less hours to achieve higher life satisfaction whereas no significant relationships were found between other occupations and desire to work a certain amount to affect life satisfaction.

Overall, Shao found that women prefer to work less hours per week than men which tends to increase life satisfaction among women. Lastly, income among the middle class was significantly more impactful on life satisfaction compared to the upper/rich class. Shao suggests that middle class workers tend to report higher life satisfaction than upper class workers because the middle class require additional income to be upwardly mobile, which can be motivating.

The study, “Does less working time improve life satisfaction? Evidence from European Social Survey“, was published September 20, 2022.

RELATED

Acetaminophen use during pregnancy linked to higher risk of autism, ADHD in children
ADHD

Acetaminophen use during pregnancy linked to higher risk of autism, ADHD in children

August 25, 2025

Researchers reviewed dozens of studies and found that children whose mothers used acetaminophen during pregnancy were more likely to be diagnosed with neurodevelopmental disorders. The study adds weight to growing concerns about the drug’s safety in pregnancy.

Read moreDetails
Alcohol use disorder may exacerbate Alzheimer’s disease through shared genetic pathways
Mental Health

High-fat fructose diet linked to anxiety-like behavior via disrupted liver-brain communication

August 24, 2025

A new study suggests that non-alcoholic fatty liver disease may contribute to anxiety by promoting brain inflammation and disrupting glutamate regulation. In mice, these changes were triggered by a high-fat fructose diet—and reversed with the plant compound corilagin.

Read moreDetails
Does cannabidiol reduce worry severity or anxiety symptoms? New placebo-controlled study says no
Cannabis

Cannabidiol shows potential to reverse some neuropsychological effects of social stress

August 24, 2025

A non-intoxicating cannabis compound may help protect the brain from the damaging effects of chronic social stress. New research shows cannabidiol reversed stress-related changes in behavior and gene expression in mice exposed to repeated social defeat.

Read moreDetails
Women feel unsafe when objectified—but may still self-sexualize if the man is attractive or wealthy
Autism

A new frontier in autism research: predicting risk in babies as young as two months

August 23, 2025

Clinical trials are underway for an eye-tracking test that may predict autism in infancy, potentially revolutionizing early intervention. Yet the technology also poses difficult questions about medical ethics, parental decision-making, and how predictive data should be handled by insurers.

Read moreDetails
Study suggests that prefrontal cortex damage can have a paradoxical effect on rationality
Mental Health

Cerebellar-prefrontal brain connectivity may shape negative symptoms in psychosis

August 23, 2025

A new study supports the idea that reduced connectivity between the cerebellum and prefrontal cortex contributes to negative symptoms in psychosis. The findings may inform future treatments aimed at improving motivation, memory, and daily functioning.

Read moreDetails
Stress-induced “fixated” eating patterns linked to dopamine disruption, study finds
Addiction

Dopamine-boosting drug enhances self-control and reduces drinking in people with alcohol use disorder

August 22, 2025

A new study suggests the dopamine-boosting drug tolcapone may enhance self-control and reduce alcohol intake in people with alcohol use disorder by increasing activity in brain regions linked to inhibitory control, such as the inferior frontal gyrus and prefrontal cortex.

Read moreDetails
Positive attitudes toward AI linked to problematic social media use
Autism

Scientist who linked autism to chemical and pharmaceutical exposures saw her entire division shut down by RFK Jr.

August 22, 2025

Shortly before publishing a study linking chemical exposure to autism severity in children, a coauthor’s entire research division was eliminated by RFK Jr. The findings raise new concerns about how parental occupational exposures may shape developmental outcomes in autism.

Read moreDetails
Research shows diabetes drug could reduce dementia risk. Here’s how the two diseases may be linked
Depression

Antidepressant withdrawal symptoms may be more common and more severe than some studies suggest

August 22, 2025

A new study challenges previous claims that antidepressant withdrawal is rare or mild. Researchers found that more than half of patients report symptoms when discontinuing, suggesting earlier reviews relying on short-term trials may have underestimated the risks.

Read moreDetails

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Psilocybin and MDMA may reset fear-related brain-immune signaling, scientists find

Acetaminophen use during pregnancy linked to higher risk of autism, ADHD in children

Neuroscientists find evidence of an internal brain rhythm that orchestrates memory

High-fat fructose diet linked to anxiety-like behavior via disrupted liver-brain communication

Study finds Trump and Harris used distinct rhetoric in 2024—but shared more similarities than expected

Evolution may have capped human brain size to balance energy costs and survival

Cannabidiol shows potential to reverse some neuropsychological effects of social stress

Top AI models fail spectacularly when faced with slightly altered medical questions

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy