Flourishing in Hong Kong: An analysis of wellbeing-related outcomes in the Global Flourishing Study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5502/ijw.v15i3.6119Abstract
Using population-based data from Hong Kong (N = 3,012) drawn from Wave 1 of the Global Flourishing Study, this study examines the distribution of multidimensional flourishing and explores sociodemographic variation across psychological, social, physical, and economic domains. Overall, respondents reported relatively strong happiness and life satisfaction and financial wellbeing, alongside less favourable social connectedness. Patterns of flourishing varied across age, gender, education, employment, and religious affiliation, highlighting meaningful heterogeneity within the population. Early older adults tended to show more favourable wellbeing profiles, whereas younger adults and nonreligious individuals displayed comparatively lower scores across several domains. Educational attainment and employment status were differentially associated with wellbeing outcomes, underscoring the complex relationship between socioeconomic position and flourishing in Hong Kong’s unique cultural and economic context. Together, these findings provide a population-level overview of flourishing in Hong Kong, identify subgroups that may benefit from targeted policy and public health interventions, and establish a baseline for future longitudinal monitoring of wellbeing.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Lanxi Huang, Xu Jia-Qi, Maggie Yue Zhao, Hanchao Hou, Aaron Jarden, Tim Lomas, Brendan W Case, R. Noah Padgett, Ying Chen, Richard G. Cowden, Byron R. Johnson, Tyler J VanderWeele

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International Journal of Wellbeing | ISSN 1179-8602