Um. Staudinger et al., Predictors of subjective physical health and global well-being: Similarities and differences between the United States and Germany, J PERS SOC, 76(2), 1999, pp. 305-319
Predictors of subjective physical health and global well-being were compare
d in a representative U.S. (N = 2,400) and a German (N = 1,607) sample of a
dults (age range: 25-65 years). Because of cultural overlap between Western
industrialized nations, similarities in predictive patterns were expected.
Differences in the economic and social systems as well as the cultural bac
kground, however, should also generate differences. As expected, the overal
l predictive power of the three sets of predictors (sociostructural variabl
es, personality traits, and self-regulatory characteristics) was sizable in
both countries. The strongest unique predictors were self-regulatory indic
ators for subjective physical health and personality traits for global well
-being. In addition, however, theory-consistent country differences emerged
in how personal and social resources seem to be orchestrated to maximize w
ell-being.