While it’s important to chase dreams, not dollars, having the “right” disposable income seems to weigh into the equation, too, especially in Australia and New Zealand.
Using data from the Gallup World Poll, a representative sample of over 1.7 million individuals worldwide, Andrew Jebb and colleagues from the Department of Psychological Sciences at Purdue University assessed results that linked emotional satisfaction and the amount of money individuals made.
Globally, $60,000–75,000 per annum was the average. In North America, it was $105,000 a year; in Latin America, happiness comes cheap at $35,000; in Eastern Europe it was $45,000 and Asia, $70,000. The place where happiness was most expensive was right here: Australia and New Zealand topped the happiness scales at $125,000. Why do Australians need so much to feel happy? Housing…