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And the world's happiest countries are ...

DavidSling

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Fans of Denmark must be even happier than usual: Denmark has retaken the title of "world's happiest country," knocking Switzerland into second place.

Denmark and Switzerland were closely followed by Iceland, Norway and Switzerland, according to the World Happiness Report Update 2016 released Wednesday in Rome by the Sustainable Development Solutions Network for the United Nations.

Denmark won the title three of the four times the report has been issued, losing to Switzerland only once.

People in Burundi are the least satisfied with their lives, according to the survey of 156 countries, but residents of Benin (153rd place), Afghanistan (154), Togo (155) and Syria (156) aren't doing much better.

The United States ranked 13th in overall happiness, lagging behind Canada (6), Netherlands (7), New Zealand (8), Australia (9), Sweden (10), Israel (11) and Austria (12). Germany came in 16th place while other superpowers -- the United Kingdom (23), Japan (53), Russia (56) and China (83) -- were markedly lower.
Pakistan was ranked (92),while India was ranked (118).

Some countries that saw drops suffered economic and political turmoil -- including Greece, Italy and Spain -- while Ukraine's political trouble and violence likely caused a significant drop in happiness there.
Measuring happiness is important

Happiness is a better measure of human welfare than measuring education, health, poverty, income and good government separately, the report's editors argue.

There are at least seven key ingredients of happiness: People who live in the happiest countries have longer life expectancies, more social support, have more freedom to make life choices, have lower perceptions of corruption, experience more generosity and have a higher gross domestic product per capita, the report shows.

"Measuring self-reported happiness and achieving well-being should be on every nation's agenda as they begin to pursue the Sustainable Development Goals," said Jeffrey Sachs, the report's co-editor and director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, in a statement.

"Indeed the goals themselves embody the very idea that human well-being should be nurtured through a holistic approach that combines economic, social and environmental objectives," Sachs said. "Rather than taking a narrow approach focused solely on economic growth,we should promote societies that are prosperous, just, and environmentally sustainable."

Not just about the money

Iceland and Ireland both suffered through banking crises that dramatically affected their economies but didn't greatly affect their happiness, according to the report. What both countries have is a high degree of social support, enough to put Iceland in third place and Ireland in 19th place this year, according to the report.

Strictly focusing on financial well-being can obscure the larger picture, according to the University of British Columbia's John Helliwell.

"In Norway, it's quite common for people to paint each other's houses even though they can all afford to pay to have their houses painted," said Helliwell, a report co-editor and co-director of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.

"They go out of their way to help each other and it becomes a social event, and those events are enormously supportive of well being," said Helliwell. "In the commercialization of activity -- when people are more likely to buy things than to do them for themselves and each other -- we lose something along the way."

Inequality of happiness

It turns out that people are also happier in countries where there's less inequality of well-being, the report found. And happiness inequality has increased significantly "in most countries and regions of the world," said Helliwell, comparing 2012-2015 data with 2005-2011 data.

The country of Bhutan, a tiny country famous for measuring the "Gross National Happiness" of its people, ranked No. 1 in happiness equality, followed by Comoros and the Netherlands. South Sudan, Sierra Leone and Liberia had the highest happiness inequality.

A country may have really rich and really poor people, and the poor people don't have enough money to construct a good life for themselves, he said. Or people may have money but have no social support or friends or live in an area where there's government corruption or lack of freedom to make their own life choices.

The birth of 'Gross National Happiness'

It's no surprise that Bhutan would come out on top, despite not being a world economic power: Its Prime Minister proposed a World Happiness Day to the United Nations in 2011 and launched this international focus on happiness

Following in Bhutan's footsteps, the U.N. General Assembly declared March 20 as World Happiness Day in 2012, recognizing "happiness and well-being as universal goals and aspirations in the lives of human beings around the world."

In recent years, other countries have made happiness a public policy goal of their governments. Bhutan, Ecuador, Scotland, the United Arab Emirates and Venezuela have all appointed "Minsters of Happiness" to focus on the happiness of their people.

The world's happiest country is .... - CNN.com
 
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13! No..no..no we are not happy. Remember there are shootings and sexual assaults on every street and riots galore! A police state where the cops gun down people for the most minor infractions!

Stay away please! For the children's sake!!! Arghhhh!!!
 
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Pakistanis continue to be happier than Indians: UN report

ROME: Pakistanis are happier than Indians once again, according to findings of a United Nations-sanctioned report released on Wednesday.

Out of a total 157 countries that were evaluated, Pakistan came in at 92, while India was placed at 118. Both countries have slipped as last year's rankings had Pakistan at 81 and India at 117.

Aiming to "survey the scientific underpinnings of measuring and understanding subjective well-being," the report, now in its fourth edition, ranks countries by happiness levels using factors such as:

GDP per capita, healthy years of life expectancy, social support (as measured by having someone to count on in times of trouble), trust (as measured by a perceived absence of corruption in government and business), perceived freedom to make life decisions, and generosity (as measured by recent donations).

Differences in social support, incomes and healthy life expectancy are the three most important factors.

This time around, Denmark overtook Switzerland as the world's happiest place.

The report, prepared by the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) and the Earth Institute at Columbia University, urged nations regardless of wealth to tackle inequality and protect the environment.

It showed Syria, Afghanistan and eight sub-Saharan countries as the 10 least happy places on earth to live.

The top 10 this year were Denmark, Switzerland, Iceland, Norway, Finland, Canada, Netherlands, New Zealand, Australia, and Sweden. Denmark was in third place last year, behind Switzerland and Iceland.

The bottom 10 were Madagascar, Tanzania, Liberia, Guinea, Rwanda, Benin, Afghanistan, Togo, Syria and Burundi.

The United States came in at 13, the United Kingdom at 23, France at 32, and Italy at 50.

"There is a very strong message for my country, the United States, which is very rich, has gotten a lot richer over the last 50 years, but has gotten no happier," said Professor Jeffrey Sachs, head of the SDSN and special advisor to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

While the differences between countries where people are happy and those where they are not could be scientifically measured, "we can understand why and do something about it," Sachs, one of the report's authors, told Reuters in an interview in Rome.

"The message for the United States is clear. For a society that just chases money, we are chasing the wrong things. Our social fabric is deteriorating, social trust is deteriorating, faith in government is deteriorating," he said.

"When countries single-mindedly pursue individual objectives, such as economic development to the neglect of social and environmental objectives, the results can be highly adverse for human wellbeing, even dangerous for survival," it said.

"Many countries in recent years have achieved economic growth at the cost of sharply rising inequality, entrenched social exclusion, and grave damage to the natural environment.”

Yardstick for happiness
The first report was issued in 2012 to support a United Nations meeting on happiness and well-being. Five countries ─ Bhutan, Ecuador, Scotland, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela ─ now have appointed Ministers of Happiness charged with promoting it as a goal of public policy.

The 2016 survey showed that three countries in particular, Ireland, Iceland and Japan, were able to maintain their happiness levels despite external shocks such as the post-2007 economic crisis and the 2011 earthquake because of social support and solidarity.

Sachs pointed to Costa Rica, which came in 14th and ahead of many wealthier countries, as an example of a healthy, happy society although it is not an economic powerhouse.
 
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Often feel unhappy as a tired Chinese top student...
Not so surprised to see this rank.(๑•́ωก̀๑)
 
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we are 92th happiest nation because our dialing country code is +92 :azn:
 
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Pakistan 201/5 (20/20 over)
Bangladesh 146/6 (20/20 over)


Pakistan won by 55 runs

Bangladesh........... RR 7.30
Last 5 ovs 48/2... RR 9.60
Pakistan........... RR 10.05
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Yes, I agree with India's ranking..India does not mean people like me who work for MNCs, earn handsome salary and spend free time on forums like this talking big things!...There is more to India, lot of people still have to struggle with their basic necessities, never ending evolution of our political system making things more difficult causing common men feel unhappy, corruption is eating up resources meant for upliftment of poor and needy people making them unhappy, caste based quota system making deserving and bright people feel unhappy, tens of types of taxes and growing making people unhappy.....no social security no economical healthcare for all, making many tax payer unhappy.... But, all this will change and we will make it to the top 50.! But when? God knows!
 
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Romantics will say that money doesn't buy you happiness. But looking at the country rankings and their living standards I have to say this looks to be false.
 
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