homehome Home chatchat Notifications


The World's happiest countries: Europe takes 8 out of first 10 places

The United Nations General Assembly has just released its second annual World Happiness Report, measuring happiness and well-being in countries around the world in an attempt to help guide public policy; it has been consistently shown that happiness plays an important role in society – happy people live longer, have more productive lives, earn higher […]

Mihai Andrei
September 11, 2013 @ 5:28 am

share Share

The United Nations General Assembly has just released its second annual World Happiness Report, measuring happiness and well-being in countries around the world in an attempt to help guide public policy; it has been consistently shown that happiness plays an important role in society – happy people live longer, have more productive lives, earn higher wages, and in general, are better citizens.

The happiest countries in the world

Before we go into how this top was created and what factors were taken into consideration, here’s the results: Denmark topped the list of the happiest nations, followed by Norway, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Sweden. The six main factors taken into consideration were GDP per capita, healthy life expectancy, someone to count on, perceived freedom to make life choices, freedom from corruption, and generosity. Yep, generosity goes a long way to being happy.

happiness-3

Calculating happiness

Now, the word ‘happiness‘ is not taken lightly, especially as it has an inherent vagueness with it. Happines is, as the report puts it, ‘an aspiration of every human being’, and arguably the best indicator of social progress. America’s founding fathers declared an inalienable right to pursue happiness, something which lies at the very core of every human. But how do you even measure happiness?

First of all, you have to make the disctinction between two different instances of happiness – an emotion (as in ‘I am happy with how things went yesterday’), and a general state of life satisfaction (‘I am happy with my life right now’).

Interestingly enough, the single most important factor of unhappiness across the world was mental illnesses – something grossly ignored by policy makers. Now, of course, mental illnesses are terrible and affect a significant part of the population, but it comes as quite a shock (to me at least) that this factor is more important than poverty or freedom to make choices. By far the most common forms of mental illness are depression and anxiety disorders, and according to the report, around 10% of the global population is affected at any given time. Cost effective treatments exist almost everywhere across the world, but schools and workplacess tend to ignore these problems, even though evidence-based treatments can have low or zero net cost.

depression

In conclusion, there is now a rising worldwide demand that policy be more closely aligned with what really matters to people as they themselves characterize their lives. The fact that rich, European countries top the chart is definitely a good indicator, but the fact that US comes at 17, behind Mexico, the United Arab Emirates and Costa Rica shows that it’s not all about the money.

Read the full report HERE.

share Share

People Who Keep Score in Relationships Are More Likely to End Up Unhappy

A 13-year study shows that keeping score in love quietly chips away at happiness.

We can still easily get AI to say all sorts of dangerous things

Jailbreaking an AI is still an easy task.

Is a Plant-Based Diet Really Healthy for Your Dog? This Study Has Surprising Findings

You may need to revisit your dog's diet.

A Single LSD Treatment Could Keep Anxiety At Bay for Months

This was all done in a controlled medical setting.

Eight Seconds Is All You Get. Why Attention Spans Are Shrinking and What To Do About It

If the content is interesting, motivation can improve sustained attention.

Magic Mushrooms Change How People Look at Art But Not How Much They Like it

On psychedelics, eyes fixate on details rather than wandering freely.

New Dads’ Brains Light Up in Surprising Ways When They See Their Babies

New fathers’ brains respond uniquely to their own infants, tuning for care and connection.

Why personalized gifts make people feel more loved than expensive presents

Personalized gifts spark pride, strengthen bonds, and can even make gift-giving more sustainable.

Researchers Are Raising a Red Flag About the Long-Term Happiness of Couples Who Met Online

Swipe, match, regret?

People Who Choose to Live With Less Report Higher Happiness and a Stronger Sense of Purpose Than Big Spenders. What Is Voluntary Simplicity?

Fulfilling relationships, not more stuff, may be the key to wellbeing