↖︎ Vishal Singh

Felt money, measured world · Gallup World Poll · 2016–2020

Feeling rich is not the same as being rich

Across 147 countries, every doubling of national income is associated with about 0.20 extra points of felt financial comfort on Gallup's four-step scale — and the feeling never tops out, not across countries and not within them. But whole regions feel far richer, or far poorer, than their income says they should.

17.8%of the world says it is “living comfortably” on present income (population-weighted, 148 countries)
+0.20felt-adequacy points per doubling of GNI per capita, across 147 countries
150 / 150countries where the richest fifth feels more comfortable than the fourth fifth — no saturation anywhere
0.50correlation between feeling richer than your income predicts and rating your life better than it predicts

Gallup asks almost everyone on earth a deceptively small question: which phrase comes closest to your feelings about your household income — living comfortably, getting by, finding it difficult, or finding it very difficult? Pool the answers from 2016 through 2020, weight each country’s sample the way Gallup intends, weight countries by population, and the world delivers its verdict on its own paycheck: in 148 surveyed countries, home to about 7.3 billion people, 17.8 percent say they live comfortably. Four in ten — 39.9 percent — find it difficult or very difficult. 15.3 percent choose the bleakest phrase on offer.

The world’s feelings about its paycheck

Population-weighted shares of adults, 148 countries, pooled 2016–2020

17.8%42.3%24.6%15.3%
Living comfortablyGetting byFinding it difficultFinding it very difficult

That question is not a happiness question. It is a feeling about money — what researchers call a domain perception — and this essay keeps it strictly separate from the famous life-evaluation “ladder.” Treated on its own terms, felt financial adequacy turns out to behave in ways the happiness literature would not lead you to expect: it rises with income everywhere it can be measured, keeps rising at the very top of every income distribution, and yet sits so loosely on actual income that whole regions feel roughly half a point richer or poorer than the money says they should.

Felt adequacy — a perception of money

“Which one of these phrases comes closest to your own feelings about your household income these days?”

1 = finding it very difficult · 2 = finding it difficult · 3 = getting by · 4 = living comfortably. A feeling about the household budget — not a well-being outcome.

The ladder — evaluative well-being

“On which step of the ladder would you say you personally stand at this time?”

0 = worst possible life · 10 = best possible life. Used here only as a contrast. The two are never treated as the same thing.

1The going rate for “comfortable”

Plot each country’s average answer against its income level and the relationship is about as clean as cross-national survey data gets. Log GNI per capita explains 66 percent of the cross-country variance in average felt adequacy, and the slope works out to +0.20 scale points per doubling of national income.

Felt income adequacy vs. national income, 147 countries

Vertical axis: wgt-weighted country mean of the four-step income-feelings item, pooled 2016–2020. Horizontal axis: GNI per capita (2011 PPP $, log scale, static ~2015–2018 join). Curve: log-linear OLS. Hover any dot for detail.

Low incomeLower-middleUpper-middleHigh incomelog-linear fit
22.533.53 = “getting by”2 = “finding it difficult”$1k$2k$5k$10k$20k$50kGNI per capita, 2011 PPP $ (log scale)mean felt adequacy (1–4)+0.20 per doubling of incomeAfghanistan: felt adequacy 1.93 at $1,824 GNI per capitaAlbania: felt adequacy 2.17 at $11,886 GNI per capitaAlgeria: felt adequacy 2.87 at $13,802 GNI per capitaArgentina: felt adequacy 2.60 at $18,461 GNI per capitaArmenia: felt adequacy 2.67 at $9,144 GNI per capitaAustralia: felt adequacy 3.31 at $43,560 GNI per capitaAustria: felt adequacy 3.16 at $45,415 GNI per capitaAzerbaijan: felt adequacy 2.67 at $15,600 GNI per capitaBahrain: felt adequacy 2.95 at $41,580 GNI per capitaBangladesh: felt adequacy 2.73 at $3,677 GNI per capitaBelarus: felt adequacy 2.89 at $16,323 GNI per capitaBelgium: felt adequacy 2.99 at $42,156 GNI per capitaBenin: felt adequacy 2.01 at $2,061 GNI per capitaBolivia: felt adequacy 2.71 at $6,714 GNI per capitaBosnia Herzegovina: felt adequacy 2.88 at $11,716 GNI per capitaBotswana: felt adequacy 2.23 at $15,534 GNI per capitaBrazil: felt adequacy 2.70 at $13,755 GNI per capitaBulgaria: felt adequacy 2.45 at $18,740 GNI per capitaBurkina Faso: felt adequacy 2.21 at $1,650 GNI per capitaCambodia: felt adequacy 2.50 at $3,413 GNI per capitaCameroon: felt adequacy 2.18 at $3,315 GNI per capitaCanada: felt adequacy 3.30 at $43,433 GNI per capitaCentral African Republic: felt adequacy 1.77 at $663 GNI per capitaChad: felt adequacy 1.93 at $1,750 GNI per capitaChile: felt adequacy 2.79 at $21,910 GNI per capitaChina: felt adequacy 2.70 at $15,270 GNI per capitaColombia: felt adequacy 2.52 at $12,938 GNI per capitaComoros: felt adequacy 2.45 at $1,399 GNI per capitaCongo Brazzaville: felt adequacy 2.06 at $5,694 GNI per capitaCongo Kinshasa: felt adequacy 2.04 at $796 GNI per capitaCosta Rica: felt adequacy 2.88 at $14,636 GNI per capitaCroatia: felt adequacy 2.71 at $22,162 GNI per capitaCyprus: felt adequacy 2.78 at $31,568 GNI per capitaCzech Republic: felt adequacy 3.02 at $30,588 GNI per capitaDenmark: felt adequacy 3.50 at $47,918 GNI per capitaDominican Republic: felt adequacy 2.35 at $13,921 GNI per capitaEcuador: felt adequacy 2.39 at $10,347 GNI per capitaEgypt: felt adequacy 2.34 at $10,355 GNI per capitaEl Salvador: felt adequacy 2.42 at $6,868 GNI per capitaEstonia: felt adequacy 3.03 at $28,993 GNI per capitaEswatini: felt adequacy 2.41 at $7,620 GNI per capitaEthiopia: felt adequacy 2.23 at $1,719 GNI per capitaFinland: felt adequacy 3.28 at $41,002 GNI per capitaFrance: felt adequacy 3.06 at $39,254 GNI per capitaGabon: felt adequacy 2.38 at $16,431 GNI per capitaGambia: felt adequacy 2.45 at $1,516 GNI per capitaGeorgia: felt adequacy 2.49 at $9,186 GNI per capitaGermany: felt adequacy 3.20 at $46,136 GNI per capitaGhana: felt adequacy 2.29 at $4,096 GNI per capitaGreece: felt adequacy 2.39 at $24,648 GNI per capitaGuatemala: felt adequacy 2.49 at $7,278 GNI per capitaGuinea: felt adequacy 2.06 at $2,067 GNI per capitaHaiti: felt adequacy 2.10 at $1,665 GNI per capitaHonduras: felt adequacy 2.34 at $4,215 GNI per capitaHong Kong: felt adequacy 2.99 at $58,420 GNI per capitaHungary: felt adequacy 2.48 at $25,393 GNI per capitaIceland: felt adequacy 3.45 at $45,810 GNI per capitaIndia: felt adequacy 2.42 at $6,353 GNI per capitaIndonesia: felt adequacy 2.96 at $10,846 GNI per capitaIran: felt adequacy 2.37 at $19,130 GNI per capitaIraq: felt adequacy 2.42 at $17,789 GNI per capitaIreland: felt adequacy 3.20 at $53,754 GNI per capitaIsrael: felt adequacy 2.78 at $32,711 GNI per capitaItaly: felt adequacy 2.85 at $35,299 GNI per capitaIvory Coast: felt adequacy 2.15 at $3,481 GNI per capitaJapan: felt adequacy 3.15 at $38,986 GNI per capitaJordan: felt adequacy 2.21 at $8,288 GNI per capitaKazakhstan: felt adequacy 3.18 at $22,626 GNI per capitaKenya: felt adequacy 2.19 at $2,961 GNI per capitaKuwait: felt adequacy 3.12 at $70,524 GNI per capitaKyrgyzstan: felt adequacy 3.01 at $3,255 GNI per capitaLaos: felt adequacy 2.71 at $6,070 GNI per capitaLatvia: felt adequacy 2.63 at $25,002 GNI per capitaLebanon: felt adequacy 2.50 at $13,378 GNI per capitaLesotho: felt adequacy 2.05 at $3,255 GNI per capitaLiberia: felt adequacy 2.06 at $667 GNI per capitaLibya: felt adequacy 2.75 at $11,100 GNI per capitaLithuania: felt adequacy 3.17 at $28,314 GNI per capitaLuxembourg: felt adequacy 3.42 at $65,016 GNI per capitaMadagascar: felt adequacy 1.98 at $1,358 GNI per capitaMalawi: felt adequacy 2.05 at $1,064 GNI per capitaMalaysia: felt adequacy 2.95 at $26,107 GNI per capitaMali: felt adequacy 2.40 at $1,953 GNI per capitaMalta: felt adequacy 3.25 at $34,396 GNI per capitaMauritania: felt adequacy 2.31 at $3,592 GNI per capitaMauritius: felt adequacy 2.82 at $20,189 GNI per capitaMexico: felt adequacy 2.63 at $16,944 GNI per capitaMoldova: felt adequacy 2.50 at $5,554 GNI per capitaMongolia: felt adequacy 2.49 at $10,103 GNI per capitaMontenegro: felt adequacy 2.79 at $16,779 GNI per capitaMorocco: felt adequacy 2.63 at $7,340 GNI per capitaMozambique: felt adequacy 1.83 at $1,093 GNI per capitaMyanmar: felt adequacy 2.96 at $5,567 GNI per capitaNamibia: felt adequacy 2.18 at $9,387 GNI per capitaNepal: felt adequacy 2.49 at $2,471 GNI per capitaNetherlands: felt adequacy 3.35 at $47,900 GNI per capitaNew Zealand: felt adequacy 3.34 at $33,970 GNI per capitaNicaragua: felt adequacy 2.54 at $5,157 GNI per capitaNiger: felt adequacy 2.00 at $906 GNI per capitaNigeria: felt adequacy 2.18 at $5,231 GNI per capitaNorth Macedonia: felt adequacy 2.65 at $12,505 GNI per capitaNorthern Cyprus: felt adequacy 2.79 at $31,568 GNI per capitaNorway: felt adequacy 3.59 at $68,012 GNI per capitaPakistan: felt adequacy 2.45 at $5,311 GNI per capitaPalestine: felt adequacy 2.21 at $5,055 GNI per capitaPanama: felt adequacy 2.68 at $19,178 GNI per capitaParaguay: felt adequacy 2.66 at $8,380 GNI per capitaPeru: felt adequacy 2.50 at $11,789 GNI per capitaPhilippines: felt adequacy 2.50 at $9,154 GNI per capitaPoland: felt adequacy 2.89 at $26,150 GNI per capitaPortugal: felt adequacy 2.82 at $27,315 GNI per capitaRomania: felt adequacy 2.60 at $22,646 GNI per capitaRussia: felt adequacy 2.97 at $24,233 GNI per capitaRwanda: felt adequacy 2.33 at $1,811 GNI per capitaSaudi Arabia: felt adequacy 3.03 at $49,680 GNI per capitaSenegal: felt adequacy 2.32 at $2,384 GNI per capitaSerbia: felt adequacy 2.73 at $13,019 GNI per capitaSierra Leone: felt adequacy 2.01 at $1,240 GNI per capitaSingapore: felt adequacy 3.24 at $82,503 GNI per capitaSlovakia: felt adequacy 2.83 at $29,467 GNI per capitaSlovenia: felt adequacy 3.20 at $30,594 GNI per capitaSouth Africa: felt adequacy 2.26 at $11,923 GNI per capitaSouth Korea: felt adequacy 2.84 at $35,945 GNI per capitaSouth Sudan: felt adequacy 1.87 at $963 GNI per capitaSpain: felt adequacy 2.97 at $34,258 GNI per capitaSri Lanka: felt adequacy 2.61 at $11,326 GNI per capitaSweden: felt adequacy 3.44 at $47,766 GNI per capitaSwitzerland: felt adequacy 3.42 at $57,625 GNI per capitaTajikistan: felt adequacy 2.90 at $3,317 GNI per capitaTanzania: felt adequacy 2.39 at $2,655 GNI per capitaThailand: felt adequacy 2.61 at $15,516 GNI per capitaTogo: felt adequacy 1.96 at $1,453 GNI per capitaTunisia: felt adequacy 2.49 at $10,275 GNI per capitaTurkey: felt adequacy 2.65 at $24,804 GNI per capitaTurkmenistan: felt adequacy 3.37 at $15,594 GNI per capitaUganda: felt adequacy 1.94 at $1,658 GNI per capitaUkraine: felt adequacy 2.63 at $8,130 GNI per capitaUnited Arab Emirates: felt adequacy 3.15 at $67,805 GNI per capitaUnited Kingdom: felt adequacy 3.21 at $39,116 GNI per capitaUnited States: felt adequacy 3.23 at $54,941 GNI per capitaUruguay: felt adequacy 2.80 at $19,930 GNI per capitaUzbekistan: felt adequacy 3.20 at $6,470 GNI per capitaVenezuela: felt adequacy 1.93 at $10,672 GNI per capitaVietnam: felt adequacy 2.92 at $5,859 GNI per capitaYemen: felt adequacy 2.02 at $1,239 GNI per capitaZambia: felt adequacy 2.12 at $3,557 GNI per capitaZimbabwe: felt adequacy 1.81 at $1,683 GNI per capitaAfghanistanBotswanaCentral African RepublicCosta RicaDenmarkGreeceHungaryIranIsraelKyrgyzstanMyanmarNorwaySingaporeSouth AfricaTajikistanTurkmenistanUnited StatesUzbekistanVenezuelaVietnam
Each dot is one country (minimum 1,000 pooled interviews). Countries above the curve feel richer than their income predicts; below, poorer. Labeled countries are the largest residuals plus reference points. R² = 0.66.

Two things about that line. First, it has no plateau. If anything it bends the other way: among the 97 countries below $20,000 GNI per capita, a doubling of national income is associated with +0.15 points; among the 50 countries at or above $20,000, with +0.37. Rich countries convert marginal national income into felt comfort at more than twice the rate poor countries do — the opposite of saturation. Second, the equivalent line for the Cantril ladder — the life-evaluation question behind the World Happiness Report — fits almost identically (R² = 0.64; +0.50 rungs per doubling). Money’s statistical grip on feeling paid is as strong as its famous grip on life evaluation. The interesting part is who slips that grip.

2Countries that feel richer than they are

The biggest over-performers sit in one neighborhood. Kyrgyzstan posts the largest positive residual on earth: +0.71 points above the curve on a four-point scale. Its neighbors follow — Uzbekistan (+0.70), Turkmenistan (+0.62), Tajikistan (+0.59) — along with Myanmar (+0.50) and Vietnam (+0.45). Kyrgyzstan, with a GNI per capita of $3,255, reports feeling about as comfortable on its income (3.01) as the typical high-income country — and decisively more comfortable than Greece (2.39), a country more than seven times richer.

Read Central Asia with some care: several of these surveys are conducted in tightly controlled political settings, and answer styles differ across cultures, so the precise size of any one country’s gap should be held loosely. But the rich-world over-performers are reassuringly familiar: Denmark (3.50, sitting +0.42 above the curve) and Norway (3.59, +0.42) post the two highest felt-adequacy averages measured anywhere.

The under-performers tell a sharper story. Venezuela sits 0.71 below the line — these are its collapse years, with the static income figure flattering an economy in free fall. Greece (−0.50) and Hungary (−0.42) carry the scar tissue of austerity and transition. And then a distinct cluster: Botswana (−0.52), Namibia (−0.42) and South Africa (−0.42) — middle-income on paper, and among the most unequal countries the World Bank has ever measured. The pattern generalizes: across the 137 countries with a Gini estimate, felt-adequacy residuals correlate −0.37 with inequality. National income that exists but visibly belongs to someone else does not feel like enough.

3Inside countries, the feeling never tops out

Across countries, no plateau. What about within them — does felt adequacy saturate as you climb your own country’s income ladder? The answer is no, nowhere. In every one of the 150 countries with full quintile coverage, the richest fifth feels more comfortable than the fourth fifth: 150 of 150. And in 82 of them — 55 percent — the step from the fourth quintile to the richest is the single largest of the four steps.

Felt adequacy by within-country income quintile

Each thin line is one country’s wgt-weighted quintile profile; the bold line is the unweighted average across countries in the group (“the typical country”). Quintile 1 = poorest fifth of that country, 5 = richest fifth.

Low income · 29 countries

2341.802.56top step +0.3012345poorestrichest

Lower-middle · 34 countries

2342.072.95top step +0.2812345poorestrichest

Upper-middle · 38 countries

2342.143.10top step +0.3012345poorestrichest

High income · 47 countries

2342.603.47top step +0.2312345poorestrichest
150 countries with at least 150 interviews in every quintile cell (148 shown — two lack a World Bank income-group code). The gradient steepens at the top in poorer groups and at the bottom in rich ones; it flattens nowhere.

The shape differs by where you are. In the typical high-income country the steepest felt gap is at the bottom: moving from the poorest fifth to the second fifth is worth +0.27 points, the biggest single step. In the typical low-income country the gradient runs the other way: the bottom step is worth just +0.13 — the poorest 40 percent feel close to equally strapped — while the top step is worth +0.30. In poor countries, escaping the feeling of poverty is something that happens near the top of the national distribution, not the bottom.

And national context dominates personal rank. The poorest fifth in the typical high-income country (2.60) feels marginally more comfortable than the richest fifth in the typical low-income country (2.56). The blunter standard-of-living question agrees: in the typical low-income country the bottom two quintiles are indistinguishable — 41.3 versus 41.4 percent satisfied with their standard of living — and even its richest fifth (53 percent) trails the poorest fifth of the typical rich country (68 percent). Being rich where you live buys the feeling; living somewhere rich buys more of it.

One honest qualification: at the very top of the very richest countries, the scale itself runs out of room. In the United States the step from the fourth quintile to the richest is just +0.06 (3.54 to 3.60) — less a plateau of feeling than a ceiling on the answer sheet, since “living comfortably” is the highest phrase on offer. A four-step scale cannot tell the comfortable from the very comfortable. A companion piece in this collection, on US data, shows that with a finer instrument the top of the well-being distribution keeps rising with income; the same is likely true of felt comfort.

4Feeling paid is not rating your life well

If felt adequacy were just life evaluation wearing a money costume, countries that beat the income curve on one would beat it on the other. They mostly don’t. Fit the same log-income curve to the ladder, compare each country’s two residuals, and the correlation is 0.50 — real, but only about a quarter of shared variance. The disagreements are systematic, and they redraw the map.

Latin America rates its life far better than it feels paid. Costa Rica scores its life +1.42 rungs above what its income predicts — among the largest ladder residuals anywhere — yet its felt money adequacy is only +0.14 above its own curve. Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Ecuador crowd the same quadrant. Israel rates its life at 7.19 while feeling slightly poorer than its income predicts (−0.18). The mirror quadrant belongs to South and Southeast Asia and East Africa: India feels roughly right for its income about money (−0.07) while rating its life a remarkable 1.41 rungs below its income line; Tanzania (−1.05 on the ladder, +0.15 on money), Rwanda, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Myanmar follow the same pattern. Felt money and the evaluated life are different verdicts — conflate them and you would mistake Latin America for financially serene and Central Asia for miserable.

Two ways to beat your income — and they disagree

Horizontal: how far the country’s mean ladder sits above or below the income curve (rungs). Vertical: how far its felt adequacy sits above or below its curve (scale points). Same 147 countries, 2016–2020.

feels richer than it rates its life (top 8 divergers)rates life higher than it feels paid (top 8 divergers)all other countries
-2 rungs-1 rungs+1 rung−0.5+0.5rates life better than income predicts →← rates life worsefeels richer ↑↓ feels poorerfeels paid, rates life low — Central & South Asia, East Africarates life high, feels money-poor — Latin America, IsraelAfghanistan: ladder residual −1.23, felt-adequacy residual −0.20Albania: ladder residual −0.65, felt-adequacy residual −0.51Algeria: ladder residual −0.57, felt-adequacy residual +0.16Argentina: ladder residual +0.18, felt-adequacy residual −0.21Armenia: ladder residual −0.56, felt-adequacy residual +0.08Australia: ladder residual +0.72, felt-adequacy residual +0.26Austria: ladder residual +0.71, felt-adequacy residual +0.10Azerbaijan: ladder residual −0.55, felt-adequacy residual −0.08Bahrain: ladder residual −0.03, felt-adequacy residual −0.09Bangladesh: ladder residual +0.15, felt-adequacy residual +0.40Belarus: ladder residual −0.33, felt-adequacy residual +0.13Belgium: ladder residual +0.41, felt-adequacy residual −0.05Benin: ladder residual +0.51, felt-adequacy residual −0.16Bolivia: ladder residual +0.57, felt-adequacy residual +0.20Bosnia Herzegovina: ladder residual +0.00, felt-adequacy residual +0.22Botswana: ladder residual −2.26, felt-adequacy residual −0.52Brazil: ladder residual +0.68, felt-adequacy residual −0.01Bulgaria: ladder residual −0.73, felt-adequacy residual −0.35Burkina Faso: ladder residual +0.49, felt-adequacy residual +0.11Cambodia: ladder residual +0.04, felt-adequacy residual +0.19Cameroon: ladder residual +0.43, felt-adequacy residual −0.12Canada: ladder residual +0.71, felt-adequacy residual +0.25Central African Republic: ladder residual −0.39, felt-adequacy residual −0.07Chad: ladder residual +0.15, felt-adequacy residual −0.19Chile: ladder residual +0.29, felt-adequacy residual −0.06China: ladder residual −0.45, felt-adequacy residual −0.05Colombia: ladder residual +0.47, felt-adequacy residual −0.17Comoros: ladder residual +0.28, felt-adequacy residual +0.39Congo Brazzaville: ladder residual −0.10, felt-adequacy residual −0.40Congo Kinshasa: ladder residual +0.81, felt-adequacy residual +0.15Costa Rica: ladder residual +1.42, felt-adequacy residual +0.14Croatia: ladder residual −0.32, felt-adequacy residual −0.15Cyprus: ladder residual −0.15, felt-adequacy residual −0.18Czech Republic: ladder residual +0.63, felt-adequacy residual +0.08Denmark: ladder residual +1.05, felt-adequacy residual +0.42Dominican Republic: ladder residual −0.17, felt-adequacy residual −0.36Ecuador: ladder residual +0.40, felt-adequacy residual −0.25Egypt: ladder residual −1.18, felt-adequacy residual −0.30El Salvador: ladder residual +0.97, felt-adequacy residual −0.10Estonia: ladder residual −0.16, felt-adequacy residual +0.10Eswatini: ladder residual −0.92, felt-adequacy residual −0.13Ethiopia: ladder residual +0.10, felt-adequacy residual +0.11Finland: ladder residual +1.35, felt-adequacy residual +0.25France: ladder residual +0.22, felt-adequacy residual +0.04Gabon: ladder residual −0.95, felt-adequacy residual −0.39Gambia: ladder residual +0.68, felt-adequacy residual +0.37Georgia: ladder residual −0.65, felt-adequacy residual −0.11Germany: ladder residual +0.52, felt-adequacy residual +0.14Ghana: ladder residual +0.27, felt-adequacy residual −0.07Greece: ladder residual −0.55, felt-adequacy residual −0.49Guatemala: ladder residual +1.19, felt-adequacy residual −0.04Guinea: ladder residual +0.31, felt-adequacy residual −0.10Haiti: ladder residual −0.54, felt-adequacy residual −0.00Honduras: ladder residual +1.07, felt-adequacy residual −0.04Hong Kong: ladder residual −1.24, felt-adequacy residual −0.14Hungary: ladder residual −0.20, felt-adequacy residual −0.42Iceland: ladder residual +0.99, felt-adequacy residual +0.39India: ladder residual −1.41, felt-adequacy residual −0.07Indonesia: ladder residual −0.23, felt-adequacy residual +0.32Iran: ladder residual −1.19, felt-adequacy residual −0.44Iraq: ladder residual −1.15, felt-adequacy residual −0.37Ireland: ladder residual +0.43, felt-adequacy residual +0.09Israel: ladder residual +0.91, felt-adequacy residual −0.18Italy: ladder residual −0.01, felt-adequacy residual −0.14Ivory Coast: ladder residual +0.43, felt-adequacy residual −0.17Japan: ladder residual −0.47, felt-adequacy residual +0.14Jordan: ladder residual −0.64, felt-adequacy residual −0.36Kazakhstan: ladder residual −0.04, felt-adequacy residual +0.32Kenya: ladder residual −0.01, felt-adequacy residual −0.08Kuwait: ladder residual −0.77, felt-adequacy residual −0.07Kyrgyzstan: ladder residual +0.92, felt-adequacy residual +0.71Laos: ladder residual −0.11, felt-adequacy residual +0.23Latvia: ladder residual −0.08, felt-adequacy residual −0.26Lebanon: ladder residual −0.74, felt-adequacy residual −0.20Lesotho: ladder residual −0.92, felt-adequacy residual −0.25Liberia: ladder residual +0.78, felt-adequacy residual +0.22Libya: ladder residual −0.03, felt-adequacy residual +0.10Lithuania: ladder residual +0.00, felt-adequacy residual +0.25Luxembourg: ladder residual +0.40, felt-adequacy residual +0.25Madagascar: ladder residual +0.04, felt-adequacy residual −0.07Malawi: ladder residual −0.29, felt-adequacy residual +0.07Malaysia: ladder residual −0.73, felt-adequacy residual +0.04Mali: ladder residual +0.30, felt-adequacy residual +0.25Malta: ladder residual +0.30, felt-adequacy residual +0.27Mauritania: ladder residual −0.29, felt-adequacy residual −0.02Mauritius: ladder residual +0.05, felt-adequacy residual −0.01Mexico: ladder residual +0.63, felt-adequacy residual −0.15Moldova: ladder residual +0.64, felt-adequacy residual +0.05Mongolia: ladder residual +0.05, felt-adequacy residual −0.14Montenegro: ladder residual −0.27, felt-adequacy residual +0.01Morocco: ladder residual −0.11, felt-adequacy residual +0.10Mozambique: ladder residual +0.79, felt-adequacy residual −0.15Myanmar: ladder residual −0.62, felt-adequacy residual +0.50Namibia: ladder residual −0.84, felt-adequacy residual −0.42Nepal: ladder residual +0.71, felt-adequacy residual +0.27Netherlands: ladder residual +0.92, felt-adequacy residual +0.27New Zealand: ladder residual +0.97, felt-adequacy residual +0.36Nicaragua: ladder residual +1.16, felt-adequacy residual +0.11Niger: ladder residual +1.02, felt-adequacy residual +0.07Nigeria: ladder residual −0.06, felt-adequacy residual −0.26North Macedonia: ladder residual −0.41, felt-adequacy residual −0.03Northern Cyprus: ladder residual −0.62, felt-adequacy residual −0.16Norway: ladder residual +0.68, felt-adequacy residual +0.41Pakistan: ladder residual +0.40, felt-adequacy residual +0.01Palestine: ladder residual −0.30, felt-adequacy residual −0.22Panama: ladder residual +0.36, felt-adequacy residual −0.13Paraguay: ladder residual +0.42, felt-adequacy residual +0.09Peru: ladder residual +0.23, felt-adequacy residual −0.17Philippines: ladder residual +0.40, felt-adequacy residual −0.10Poland: ladder residual +0.05, felt-adequacy residual −0.01Portugal: ladder residual −0.36, felt-adequacy residual −0.09Romania: ladder residual +0.07, felt-adequacy residual −0.26Russia: ladder residual −0.50, felt-adequacy residual +0.09Rwanda: ladder residual −0.88, felt-adequacy residual +0.20Saudi Arabia: ladder residual −0.13, felt-adequacy residual −0.06Senegal: ladder residual +0.49, felt-adequacy residual +0.11Serbia: ladder residual +0.21, felt-adequacy residual +0.03Sierra Leone: ladder residual +0.19, felt-adequacy residual −0.01Singapore: ladder residual −0.65, felt-adequacy residual +0.01Slovakia: ladder residual +0.07, felt-adequacy residual −0.11Slovenia: ladder residual +0.07, felt-adequacy residual +0.25South Africa: ladder residual −0.72, felt-adequacy residual −0.42South Korea: ladder residual −0.47, felt-adequacy residual −0.15South Sudan: ladder residual −0.89, felt-adequacy residual −0.07Spain: ladder residual +0.09, felt-adequacy residual −0.01Sri Lanka: ladder residual −1.19, felt-adequacy residual −0.05Sweden: ladder residual +0.80, felt-adequacy residual +0.37Switzerland: ladder residual +0.84, felt-adequacy residual +0.29Tajikistan: ladder residual +0.83, felt-adequacy residual +0.59Tanzania: ladder residual −1.05, felt-adequacy residual +0.15Thailand: ladder residual +0.25, felt-adequacy residual −0.14Togo: ladder residual +0.07, felt-adequacy residual −0.10Tunisia: ladder residual −0.96, felt-adequacy residual −0.14Turkey: ladder residual −0.96, felt-adequacy residual −0.24Turkmenistan: ladder residual −0.44, felt-adequacy residual +0.61Uganda: ladder residual +0.30, felt-adequacy residual −0.17Ukraine: ladder residual −0.68, felt-adequacy residual +0.07United Arab Emirates: ladder residual −0.10, felt-adequacy residual −0.03United Kingdom: ladder residual +0.61, felt-adequacy residual +0.19United States: ladder residual +0.28, felt-adequacy residual +0.12Uruguay: ladder residual +0.44, felt-adequacy residual −0.02Uzbekistan: ladder residual +1.05, felt-adequacy residual +0.70Venezuela: ladder residual −0.71, felt-adequacy residual −0.71Vietnam: ladder residual +0.25, felt-adequacy residual +0.45Yemen: ladder residual −0.33, felt-adequacy residual −0.00Zambia: ladder residual −0.58, felt-adequacy residual −0.21Zimbabwe: ladder residual −0.79, felt-adequacy residual −0.30AlgeriaBotswanaCosta RicaDenmarkEcuadorEl SalvadorGuatemalaHondurasIndiaIndonesiaIsraelKyrgyzstanMozambiqueMyanmarRwandaSri LankaTanzaniaTurkmenistanVenezuela
Highlighted dots are the eight largest divergers in each direction (standardized). Correlation between the two residuals: 0.50.

5“Enough money to do everything I want”

For three years, 2013–2015, Gallup’s Sharecare module pushed a far more demanding version of the question on 135 countries: do you agree that you have enough money to do everything you want to do? By that maximalist standard, sufficiency is rare everywhere — and still rises with rank everywhere. In the typical high-income country, agreement climbs from 24 percent in the poorest fifth to 50 percent in the richest: even at the top of the rich world, only half feel fully sufficient. In the United States the richest fifth reaches 53 percent. The feeling of having enough, generously defined, is a minority condition even where the money is.

“You have enough money to do everything you want to do” — share agreeing

Share answering 4 or 5 on a five-point agree scale, by within-country income quintile; typical-country average within each World Bank income group, 2013–2015 (this item was fielded only in those years).

10%20%30%40%50%Low income quintile 1: 11% agree11%Low income quintile 2: 11% agreeLow income quintile 3: 12% agreeLow income quintile 4: 15% agreeLow income quintile 5: 20% agree20%Low incomepoorestrichestLower middle income quintile 1: 16% agree16%Lower middle income quintile 2: 18% agreeLower middle income quintile 3: 21% agreeLower middle income quintile 4: 24% agreeLower middle income quintile 5: 31% agree31%Lower-middlepoorestrichestUpper middle income quintile 1: 18% agree18%Upper middle income quintile 2: 19% agreeUpper middle income quintile 3: 22% agreeUpper middle income quintile 4: 25% agreeUpper middle income quintile 5: 33% agree33%Upper-middlepoorestrichestHigh income quintile 1: 24% agree24%High income quintile 2: 28% agreeHigh income quintile 3: 33% agreeHigh income quintile 4: 39% agreeHigh income quintile 5: 50% agree50%High incomepoorestrichest
135 countries with at least 150 interviews per quintile cell. The gradient climbs in every group and saturates in none.

6What this does — and doesn’t — show

Everything here is associational: countries and people differ in a thousand correlated ways, and a residual is a description, not a diagnosis. The income axis for countries is a static ~2015–2018-vintage join, which flatters collapsing economies (Venezuela) and lags fast growers. Cross-country comparisons of feelings ride on top of cross-cultural differences in how people use answer scales, so small gaps between countries should not be over-read — the patterns emphasized here are the half-point kind, not the decimal kind. Within countries, position is measured by income quintile rather than reported dollars, because per-capita dollar income in this dataset is heavily imputed; quintiles are the sturdier object.

And a boundary worth respecting: the famous income-and-happiness fights — the Easterlin paradox, Kahneman and Deaton’s $75,000 emotional-well-being plateau, Killingsworth’s no-plateau rebuttal and the 2023 adversarial collaboration that split the difference — are about well-being. This piece measures something humbler: the feeling that the money is sufficient. That humbler feeling shows no plateau anywhere we can see — not across countries, not within them, and not at the top of the rich world, where only the four-phrase answer scale itself runs out.

Notes & data

  • Source. Gallup World Poll cleaned extract. Main window: pooled 2016–2020, 706,634 interviews across the 147 analysis countries; most countries were surveyed in 4 or 5 of those years (the panel is unbalanced; per-country survey-year counts are in the data file).
  • Weights. Every per-country estimate uses Gallup’s within-country weight (wgt). The single global figure (shares of the four answers) weights wgt-weighted country shares by ~2018 population. All other cross-country statements treat each country as one observation — explicitly comparisons of countries, never a “world average.”
  • Minimums. Curve and residual analysis: ≥ 1,000 pooled interviews per country → 147 usable countries (Trinidad and Tobago, Maldives, Burundi and Jamaica fell below the minimum; Taiwan, Somalia and Kosovo lack a GNI value in the static join). Quintile gradients additionally require ≥ 150 interviews in every quintile cell → 150 countries (148 with a World Bank income group). The kill threshold for this piece was 40 usable countries; coverage is nearly four times that.
  • Constructs. income_feel (four-step feelings about household income, direction-fixed so higher = more comfortable), stdliving_sat (binary standard-of-living satisfaction) and enough_money (five-point Sharecare item, 2013–2015 only, 135 countries) are all felt financial adequacy — domain perceptions. ladder (Cantril, 0–10) is evaluative well-being. They are labeled and kept distinct throughout.
  • Country context. GNI per capita (2011 PPP $), World Bank income group, population and Gini are a static ~2015–2018-vintage compilation joined on ISO3 — context, not time-varying data.
  • Income position. Within-country rank uses Gallup’s income_quintile. Reported per-capita dollar income (income_percap) is heavily imputed in this extract and is not used anywhere in this article.
  • Response styles. Cross-country gaps in feeling items partly reflect culture-specific answer styles; treat individual small gaps with caution.
  • Citations. R. Easterlin (1974), “Does economic growth improve the human lot?”; D. Kahneman & A. Deaton (2010), PNAS 107(38); M. Killingsworth (2021), PNAS 118(4); M. Killingsworth, D. Kahneman & B. Mellers (2023), PNAS 120(10). Those papers concern happiness and income; this piece concerns felt financial adequacy and income, and the two are related but distinct questions.
  • Reproducibility. Every number above is computed by analysis/feeling-rich-being-rich/build_data.py and stored in data.json / claims.json.