Image credit: Blue A.Berry
Gender is essential for understanding the causes and consequences of life satisfaction in our societies. Although there is growing interest in the cultural analysis of the relationship between gender beliefs and subjective well-being (SWB), previous studies have not examined how this relationship depends on the predominant gender norms and gender equality at the country level. This study aims to explore the implications of the fit between (1) personal gender beliefs and public gender norms, and (2) personal gender beliefs and societal gender equality for life satisfaction. Utilizing data from the joint EVS/WVS 2017–2022, the results indicate that a structural fit in both cultural and objective aspects of the social structure is related to levels of life satisfaction. These findings provide significant empirical and theoretical contributions, offering substantive implications for the literature on gender, cultural sociology, and subjective well-being.