SALT LAKE CITY — Winning the lottery won’t make you happier, according to a new study.
What’s going on: Millions of people across the country are buying tickets for the Mega Millions lottery. But those people won’t necessarily be any happier.
A new study from researchers at the Stockholm School of Economics, Stockholm University and New York University found that jackpot winners feel a level of life satisfaction for about 10 years that might not wane.
- The winners won’t blow their winnings, either.
- "Large-prize winners experience sustained increases in overall life satisfaction that persist for over a decade and show no evidence of dissipating with time," the researchers concluded.
Why it matters: The study comes as millions of people across the country buy tickets for the Mega Millions lottery.
- The lottery currently holds a jackpot of more than $1 billion, CNBC reports.
Happiness vs. satisfaction: Researcher Robert Ostling told MarketWatch that “life satisfaction” is different from happiness since it refers to your overall quality of life. “Happiness,” though, measures your day-to-day feelings.
- Researchers thought lottery money would make people happy and improve mental health.
- However, researchers found those who won at least $100,000 didn’t have an increase in happiness or mental health.
- Winners "appear to enjoy sustained improvement in economic conditions that are robustly detectable for well over a decade after the windfall," the authors wrote.
Method: Researchers studied 3,362 winners from five to 22 years after winning.
- In total, the winners earned $277 million.
- Researchers measured their participants’ happiness, mental health, financial satisfaction and life satisfaction.