Public services, environmental quality and subjective well-being in a European city: the case of Strasbourg metropolitan area

Peer Reviewed
11 September 2023

Jean-Alain Heraud, Phu Nguyen-Van, Thi Kim Cuong Pham

This paper analyzes individual subjective well-being using a survey database from the Strasbourg metropolitan development council (France). The authors focus on the effects of externalities generated by public services (transport, culture and sport), environmental quality and feeling of security in the Strasbourg metropolitan area (Eurométropole de Strasbourg, EMS). Results show that EMS specificities (public facilities, environmental quality, safety and security) and individual features like opportunities to laugh or live with children significantly influence individual well-being. These findings are robust when using three subjective measures: feeling of well-being, environmental satisfaction and social life satisfaction. The authors also show that income may affect the perceived well-being of individuals belonging to a low-income group, while individuals belonging to a high-income group tend to be unsatisfied with environmental quality but satisfied with their social life. Besides, social comparison in terms of income does not matter for individual well-being in the Strasbourg metropolitan area.

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Heraud, J.-A., Nguyen-Van, P., & Pham, T. K. C. (2023). Public services, environmental quality and subjective well-being in a European city: the case of Strasbourg metropolitan area. Fulbright Review of Economics and Policy. https://doi.org/10.1108/frep-05-2023-0017
Publication | 25 October 2023