Online ISSN 2286-0266
Print ISSN 1223-0685
© 2026 Œconomica by ASE & SOREC
 
Mihai LĂCĂTUŞ
Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai din Cluj-Napoca
This paper examines the relationship between GDP per capita, income inequality, and happiness, starting from the idea that economic growth remains important, but cannot fully explain social well-being. Based on a comparative analysis of 60 countries during the period 2016-2020, the study examines how GDP interacts with indicators such as human development, peace, corruption, and the Gini index. The results suggest that higher income levels are generally associated with better living conditions, but the link between wealth and happiness is neither automatic nor proportional. In particular, income inequality appears to weaken the positive effect of GDP on well-being, as economic growth does not necessarily translate into broader social benefits. The paper therefore argues that GDP should be understood as a necessary economic indicator, but not as a sufficient measure of progress. A more relevant assessment of development should also consider distribution, institutional quality, and the real capacity of growth to improve people’s lives.

ŒCONOMICA no. 1-2/2026
Keywords: GDP per capita, income inequality, well-being, happiness economics, Gini index, human development, social progress
JEL: I31, D63, O47
GDP as a Means, Not an End: Inequality as the Missing Variable in Fiscal Policy Design – A 60-Country Analysis of Economic Growth and Subjective Well-Being