
Appearance, family and community, social class key drivers of life satisfaction, happiness
TORONTO, March 2024 鈥 How someone feels about their personal appearance or attractiveness can significantly affect their level of life satisfaction, according to a new study out of 91亚色 which looked at a broad range of factors and their contribution to happiness.
The importance physical appearance plays in determining someone鈥檚 level of life satisfaction was one of the more surprising findings, says 91亚色 Associate Professor of the School of Human Resources Management, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies, and lead author of the study.
Although others may rate someone highly attractive, what matters more is how satisfied a person is with their own appearance, something that could be more difficult today in a world of social influencers and social media in which appearance has an outsized role.

Published in the Journal of Happiness Studies, looked at family, work, education, social interests, social class and at how immigrants were faring, among other things, to determine which variables lead to the highest degree of life satisfaction.
Chowhan, along with 91亚色 Visting Associate Hossein Samavatyan, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Isfahan in Iran, and 91亚色 Assistant Professor , included working and non-working adults ages 25 to 64 in their study 鈥 students, caregivers, retired people and those with long-term illness 鈥 using data from the Canadian 2016 General Social Survey.
鈥淲e wanted to look at several factors that could influence life satisfaction, not just one factor, like income, work or family life, independent of the other influences,鈥 says Chowhan. 鈥淥ur study is unique in it鈥檚 comprehensiveness, but also that it looks at non-working adults along side working adults without treating them as a niche category.鈥
Another surprise was how high on the life satisfaction scale people rated family time, being part of a community outside of work and having people to depend upon 鈥 affecting an individual鈥檚 overall resiliency 鈥 compared to work variables which received lower ratings, including social relationships at the workplace.
Chowhan points out that although income definitely plays a role, it鈥檚 certainly not the only factor or even the most important one.
鈥淥ften in the literature we see income is really important or your work is really important, but it was really these family social factors that had the higher magnitudes of importance. In our study, we found that work gets a low value relative to family and social outcomes. It鈥檚 not that all aspects of work rated poorly, but overall family and community dominated.鈥
Social class, however, is another substantial determinant of how satisfied people are with their lives. While a lot of studies will examine income or education, rarely do they look at both those factors along with social class, says Chowhan. 鈥淥ur study does all three, so we have a unique data set.鈥
Social class is a distinct variable in understanding life satisfaction and one of the major contributors, he says. How people perceive their social class is connected to income, but also depends on other factors such as family size and where people live. The cost of living in a small town in Nova Scotia is a lot different than in cities like Toronto or Vancouver.
鈥淵ou could be making what would be considered a great salary or wage anywhere else in the country, but in these big cities you feel like you're only middle class,鈥 says Chowhan. 鈥淭he higher you rate yourself in terms of social class, the higher your life satisfaction, but also the gap between the lowest class and upper class is huge. If you move from the lowest class to the upper class that's just a massive jump in life satisfaction.鈥
Regardless of income, stress, whether from work, family pressures or poor health, had a moderately negative effect, while quality of health played a larger role. 鈥淭he extent to which you rate your overall health as excellent really contributes to your life satisfaction,鈥 says Chowhan.
In addition, being married or living common law is a plus on the life satisfaction scale compared to being widowed, separated or single. Recent immigrants to Canada also rated their life satisfaction as higher than those born in Canada, however, being a member of a visible minority has the opposite affect. More work needs to be done to tease that last finding out, says Chowhan, as many immigrants today are also part of a visible minority.
And, if you鈥檙e female, you are also likely to be more satisfied with life than if you are male. Best cases scenario for the highest life satisfaction? You are married, happy with your personal appearance, have good family and community supports, excellent health and consider yourself upper class.






