Login / Signup

A Longitudinal Test of the Conservative-Liberal Well-Being Gap.

Salvador Vargas SalfateSammyh S KhanJames H LiuHomero Gil de Zúñiga
Published in: Personality & social psychology bulletin (2022)
In this article, we test if conservatism predicts psychological well-being longitudinally. We based the study on previous findings showing that conservatives score higher on different measures of well-being, such as life satisfaction and happiness. Most explanations in the literature have assumed that conservatism antecedes well-being without considering the alternative-that well-being may predict conservatism. In Study 1, using multilevel cross-lagged panel models with a two-wave longitudinal sample consisting of data from 19 countries ( N = 8,740), we found that conservatism did not predict well-being over time. We found similar results in Study 2 ( N = 2,554), using random-intercept cross-lagged panel models with a four-wave longitudinal sample from Chile. We discuss the main implications of these results for the literature examining the association between conservatism and well-being.
Keyphrases
  • systematic review
  • cross sectional
  • machine learning
  • artificial intelligence
  • patient satisfaction