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Should we all just stay home? Travel,out-of-home activities,and life satisfaction
Institution:1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Maryland, 3246 Kim Bldg., College Park, MD 20742, United States;2. School of Agricultural Economics and Rural Development, Renmin University of China, 59 Zhongguancun St, Haidian, Beijing 100872, China;3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Maryland, 3250 Kim Bldg., College Park, MD 20742, United States;1. Department of Traffic Engineering, Chang’an University, Middle-section of Nan’er Huan Road, 710064 Xi’an, China;2. Urban Planning Group, Eindhoven University of Technology, De Zaale, 5612 AZ Eindhoven, Netherlands;1. Ryerson University, School of Urban and Regional Planning, 105 Bond Street, Room 420, Toronto, Ontario M5B 2K3, Canada;2. McMaster Institute for Transportation and Logistics, School of Geography and Earth Sciences, 1280 Main Street West, McMaster University, LKS 4K1, Canada
Abstract:How and why travel contributes to our life satisfaction is of considerable import for transportation policy and planning. This paper empirically examines this relationship using data from the American Time Use Survey. It finds that, controlling for relevant demographic, geographic, and temporal covariates, travel time per day is significantly and positively associated with life satisfaction. This relationship is attenuated, but still significant, when the amount of time spent participating in out-of-home activities is controlled for. Time spent bicycling is strongly associated with higher life satisfaction, though it attains significance only in some models; time spent walking is also quite positive, though it is not significant. However, both walking and bicycling are positively and significantly associated with life satisfaction when time spent on purely recreational walking and bicycling is included. Life satisfaction is positively and significantly associated with time spent traveling for the purposes of eating and drinking, religious activities, volunteering, and playing and watching sports. Travel time exhibits a strong positive relationship with life satisfaction in smaller towns and cities, but in large cities the association weakens, and for very large cities travel time may actually not be associated with life satisfaction at all. This may be due to the costs of traffic congestion, which disproportionately exists in large cities. In all, while the associations between travel and life satisfaction are clear, the causal story is complex, with the positive relationships potentially being explained by (1) travel allowing us to access destinations that make us happy, (2) the act of travel itself being fulfilling, and/or (3) intrinsically happier people being more likely to travel. In all likelihood, all three factors are at play.
Keywords:Happiness  Life satisfaction  Well-being  Travel time  Activity participation
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