Spending money on someone else rather than for personal benefit makes people feel good both in rich and poor countries, a new international study, including India, has found.
"Our findings suggest that the psychological reward experienced from helping others may be deeply ingrained in human nature, emerging in diverse cultural and economic contexts," said lead researcher Lara Aknin, of Simon Fraser University in Canada.
The findings provide the first empirical evidence that "the warm glow" of spending on someone else rather than on oneself may be a widespread component of human psychology, the researchers reported in the study published in the journal of American Psychological Association.
The survey comprised 234,917 individuals, half of whom were male, with an average age of 38. The link between well-being and spending on others was significant in every region of the world, and it was not affected by other factors among those surveyed, such as income, social support, perceived freedom and perceived national corruption.
The results were similar in several experiments the researchers themselves conducted with participants in wealthy and poor countries.
For one analysis, they compared responses from an online survey of 101 adults in India. Some respondents were asked to recall recently spending money on themselves or someone else, while others were tested for their happiness level without recalling past spending.
The researchers obtained the same results among 820 individuals recruited mostly from universities in Canada and Uganda.
The participants wrote about a time they had either spent money on themselves or on others, after which they were asked to report how happy they felt.
People who remembered spending money on someone else felt happier than those who recalled spending money on themselves, even when the researchers controlled for the extent to which people built or strengthened a relationship.
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