These Are the Happiest Countries in the World
Comment of the Day

April 24 2015

Commentary by David Fuller

These Are the Happiest Countries in the World

My thanks to a subscriber for this interesting, albeit highly subjective report from Bloomberg.  Here is the opening:

Happiness seems to be most abundant a long way from the equator. At least according to the new World Happiness Report 2015. The 10 happiest countries are Switzerland, Iceland, Denmark, Norway, Canada, Finland, Netherlands, Sweden, New Zealand, and Australia. Except for war-torn Syria and Afghanistan, the 10 unhappiest countries are all in Saharan or sub-Saharan Africa.

Then again, you don't have to be shivering to be happy. Israel and Costa Rica are the 11th and 12th happiest countries. As for those at the bottom, their unhappiness probably has a lot more to do with poverty and violence than with proximity to the zero latitude line.

The U.S. is the 15th happiest country of the 158 covered by the survey, which obtained its data primarily from the Gallup World Poll. That puts the U.S. just behind Mexico (14) but ahead of Brazil (16), Britain (21), Japan (46), Russia (64), China (84), and Iran (110). 

The World Happiness Report grew out of a project from Bhutan, a Buddhist kingdom of 700,000 people in the eastern Himalayas whose prime minister, Jigmi Y. Thinley, set out to measure Gross National Happiness. Thinley got the United Nations to adopt a 2011 resolution inviting member nations to measure their happiness as a guide to improving public policies. This is the third World Happiness Report. The first was in 2012 and the second in 2013 (it wasn't designed to be an annual undertaking, hence no report last year). 

Women tend to be happier than men in North America, Australia-New Zealand, and South and East Asia, among other regions, but less happy than men in Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union region, and sub-Saharan Africa, the report found. For both men and women, happiness drops from the teenage years until 40 or 50 and then stabilizes. 

David Fuller's view

I am surprised that Singapore is not high up the rankings among both men and women.  I am also very surprised that Britain is languishing at 21, below the United Arab Emirates, no less.  However, I may regard this as a little more justified if, heaven forefend, we get a clear change of government on May 7th.   

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