Feeling poorer than your friends is linked with worse mental health
By UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
Mental health refers to a person’s overall emotional and psychological well-being. It includes the ability to manage one’s emotions, thoughts, and behaviors effectively, as well as the ability to form and maintain healthy relationships. Good mental health is an important aspect of overall health and well-being.
A
new study from psychologists at the University of Cambridge has
found that young people who perceive themselves as coming from poorer
backgrounds than their peers are more likely to have lower self-esteem and be
victims of bullying.
The
research also revealed that both those who feel poorer and those who feel
wealthier are more likely to engage in bullying. The study’s findings suggest
that feeling a sense of economic equality among friends is associated with the
best outcomes for mental health and social behavior.
While economic disadvantage on a society-wide spectrum has long been linked to mental health and social problems in young people, the new study is one of the first to show that just feeling poorer compared to those in your immediate social sphere may be related to negative psychological outcomes.
According
to researchers, judgments we make about ourselves via “social comparison” in
early adolescence – how popular or attractive we think we are, compared to
others – are central to our burgeoning sense of self, and perceived economic
status may contribute to this development.
“Adolescence
is an age of transitions when we use social comparisons to make self-judgments
and develop our sense of self,” said study lead author Blanca Piera Pi-Sunyer,
a Cambridge Gates Scholar and Ph.D. candidate in the University’s Department of
Psychology.
“A
sense of our economic position not just in wider society, but in our immediate
environment, might be problematic for our sense of belonging,” said Piera
Pi-Sunyer. “Belonging is particularly important for well-being and psychosocial
functioning during adolescence.”
“Our
research suggests that wealth comparisons with those around us might contribute
to a sense of social and personal self-worth when we are young.”
The
latest study, recently published in the Journal of Child Psychology and
Psychiatry, was co-led by Piera Pi-Sunyer and Dr. Jack Andrews of
the University of New South
Wales, as part of a research project conducted by Cambridge
psychologist Prof Sarah-Jayne Blakemore.
The
researchers analyzed perceived economic inequality within friendship groups
among 12,995 children in the UK at age 11.
Eleven-year-olds
who believed themselves poorer than their friends scored 6-8% lower for
self-esteem, and 11% lower in terms of well-being, than those who saw
themselves as economically equal to friends.
Those
who considered themselves less wealthy were also more likely to have
“internalizing difficulties” such as anxiety, as well as behavioral problems
e.g. anger issues or hyperactivity.
Adolescents
who see themselves as poorer than their friends were 17% more likely to report
being bullied or picked on compared to those who feel financially the same as
friends at age 11.
While
reported levels of victimization fell across the board by the time young people
reached 14 years old, those who considered themselves poorer were still 8% more
likely to be victimized than those who felt economically similar to friends.
Feeling
both richer or poorer than peers was related to 3-5% higher rates of actually
perpetrating bullying. “It may be that feeling different in any way at a time
when belonging is important increases the risk of interpersonal difficulties
such as bullying,” said Piera Pi-Sunyer.
Part
of Piera Pi-Sunyer’s Ph.D. research looks at the cognitive processes behind how
we view ourselves. This includes how memorizing and internalizing
self-judgments in our earlier years can guide how we come to think of ourselves
– sometimes known as “self-schema”.
“Negative
judgments about ourselves can bias us to pay attention to information that
reinforces a lack of self-worth, which has implications for mental health. We
see this may well include economic perceptions among some of our peer and
friendship groups during adolescence,” said Piera Pi-Sunyer.
The
researchers used data collected as part of the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS),
conducted with thousands of young people born between the years 2000 and 2002.
The surveys gauged an array of mental states and social behaviors and included
questions on perceived economic status.
The
majority of children felt they were as wealthy as their friends, but 4% and 8%
perceived themselves as poorer or richer, respectively, than their friends (16%
said they didn’t know).
The
MCS also gathered data on “objective family income,” including a measure of
weekly family disposable income, allowing researchers to discount the effects
of actual parental wealth.
“Many
studies suggest that, objectively, young people from disadvantaged backgrounds
have more mental health difficulties. Our findings show that the subjective
experience of disadvantage is also relevant,” added Piera Pi-Sunyer.
“You
do not have to be rich or poor to feel richer or poorer than your friends, and
we can see this affects the mental health of young adolescents.”
Reference:
“The relationship between perceived income inequality, adverse mental health
and interpersonal difficulties in UK adolescents” by Blanca Piera Pi-Sunyer,
Jack L. Andrews, Amy Orben, Lydia G. Speyer and Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, 14
November 2022, Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.13719