Tuesday, November 01, 2005

wANT TO BE RICH - REMEMBER GOD, A research analysis

Church-going boosts economic well-being?



WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Attending religious services may enrich the soul, but it also fattens the wallet, according to research released on Tuesday.

"Doubling the frequency of attendance leads to a 9.1 percent increase in household income, or a rise of 5.5 percent as a fraction of the poverty scale," Jonathan Gruber of the economics department at Massachusetts Institute of Technology wrote in his study.

"Those with more faith may be less 'stressed out' about daily problems that impede success in the labor market and the marriage market, and therefore are more successful," Gruber wrote in the study, which was released by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Living in a community with complementary ethnic groups that share the same religion increases the frequency of going to a house of worship, he said in the paper titled "Religious Market Structure, Religious Participation, and Outcomes: Is Religion Good for You?"

Tuesday, Nov. 1

Does Affluence Fuel Spirituality? [BeliefNet]


Least Church-Going Give Most [Common Dreams News Center]


Spiritual Prospects of the Rich [BeliefNet]


Religious Affiliation Shapes Wealth Accumlulation [OSU Research News]




Is Religion a Source of World Problems? [Netscape Community]


White Church-goers Better Off Financially [Blog: Tim Thompson..Reflections]




Such visits correlate to higher levels of education and income, lower levels of welfare receipt and disability, higher levels of marriage and lower levels of divorce, the study said.


Gruber says he focused on non-Hispanic whites aged 25 or older because "there is very strong evidence of racial segregation in church-going, so that the density of Hispanics or non-whites in a religion in some area is not likely to be relevant for the religious participation of whites in that area."


Gruber divided the individuals into seven groups: Catholics, Jews, Liberal Protestants, Moderate Protestants, Conservative Protestants, other and none.
10/26/05 12:21

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