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Renewable Natural Capital, the Biocapacity, & Subjective Well-Being

March 20, 2017 |

This paper was originally published in Elsevier Journal of Cleaner Production


Highlights

  • The Biocapacity is employed as the proxy of renewable natural capital.
  • Renewable natural capital has a significant positive impact on subjective well-being for the whole set of countries.
  • Renewable natural capital is significantly and positively related to subjective well-being for the high-income countries.
  • The relationship between renewable natural capital and subjective well-being is insignificant for the low-income countries.

“Abstract: More and more literature have been researching subjective well-being from the perspective of natural capital. By employing a biological proxy of renewable natural capital, the Biocapacity, this paper aims to add to the growing literature by empirically estimating the relationship between renewable natural capital and subjective well-being. Based on a cross-sectional data set of 139 countries around the year 2013, the Ordinary Least Square regression estimations demonstrate that renewable natural capital has a significant positive impact on subjective well-being.

A sensitivity analysis by employing another proxy of subjective well-being further certifies the significant positive relationship between renewable natural capital and subjective well-being. The respective regression estimations for the high-income countries (including 77 countries) and the low-income countries (including 62 countries) show that the relationship is also significantly positive for the high-income countries whereas statistically insignificant for the low-income countries. The empirical findings of this paper further prove that renewable natural capital serves as an independent factor in affecting and explaining national subjective well-being levels and that residents do consider the ecosystem goods and services generated from renewable natural capital when they evaluate their life conditions, especially for those who have reached a certain level of living standard…”

Access the paper at: Elsevier Journal of Cleaner Production.

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