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The World's Happiest Countries, and the Top Ranked Passports

Charlie99

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The World Happiness Index 2016 just ranked the happiest countries on Earth
How does your home rate?
JOSH HRALA 17 MAR 2016
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Every year, the World Happiness Index surveys numerous people from various countries around the world in search of, as the name implies, which country has the happiest population. This year’s winner is Denmark, followed closely by Switzerland, Iceland, and Norway. The US ranked 13th.

So how do the researchers come up with this list? The process is actually rather simple, as the Index's website explains: "The rankings are based on answers to the main life evaluation question asked in the poll. This is called the Cantril ladder: it asks respondents to think of a ladder, with the best possible life for them being a 10, and the worst possible life being a 0. They are then asked to rate their own current lives on that 0 to 10 scale."

In short, the researchers straight-up asked people to rank their own happiness. These answers are then weighted based on six other factors: levels of GDP, life expectancy, generosity, social support, freedom, and corruption.

Then, the results are compared to Dystopia, an imaginary place the team created where everyone is miserable. This fictional, sad realm allows all of the countries to remain positive in the six factors listed above. In other words, Dystopia is a benchmark that every country passes to make a better graph.

If you're looking for reasons to dismiss your home country's less-than-stellar ranking, one thing this index has going against it is its rather small sample size, which only surveys 2,000 to 3,000 people per country. When you consider population size, that’s not great.

However, according to the team, "a sample size of 2,000 to 3,000 is large enough to give a fairly good estimate at the national level. This is confirmed by the 95 percent confidence intervals shown at the right-hand end of each country bar."

Now that you understand where these rankings come from, let’s take a look at some of the best and worst.

As mentioned, Denmark leads the pack with Switzerland (last year’s winner), Iceland, Norway, Finland, Canada, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Australia, and Sweden rounding out the top 10. The US ranks 13th, Germany 16th, and the UK 23rd, to name a few big players.

The unhappiest countries are Afghanistan at 154th followed by Togo and Syria. Burundi comes in last at 157th.

Besides bragging rights, what do these rankings truly tell us? The team believes the report helps countries gauge how ready they are to start pursuing the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, which include ending poverty and hunger, increasing healthcare and the quality of education, reaching gender equality and many other great, humanitarian goals that would benefit the world.

The team also believes that the index is helpful because it looks at more than just economic factors, like most other world polls do.

You can download the full report, and browse the entire rankings list on the World Happiness Index’s official site.

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Charlie99

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JEFFREY SIMPSON
Danes may be the world’s happiest, but we’re pretty close
JEFFREY SIMPSON
The Globe and Mail
Published Saturday, Mar. 19, 2016 8:00AM EDT
Last updated Saturday, Mar. 19, 2016 11:08AM EDT
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Perhaps Prince Hamlet became melancholy because something was “rotten in the state of Denmark.” Everything in Shakespeare’s play suggests a country full of “gloomy Danes” was a troubled place.

These days, Danes are the happiest people on Earth. Or so figures the annual World Happiness Report, a survey of 156 countries recently published by three economists, including Professor John Helliwell of the University of British Columbia.

The World Happiness Report, if you’ll pardon the phrase, is fun. Why, you keep asking while reading it, are the people of this or that country so happy whereas others are not? Americans, we keep hearing in their endless political campaign, are angry, riled up, fearful. Yet the report puts Americans 13th on the happiness index; if they’re as unhappy as the news media suggests, think about the people in countries below them.

The report is serious business, too, based on good methodology around answers to six measurements of happiness. These are: gross domestic product per capita, life expectancy, social support, freedom to make life choices, generosity and perceptions of corruption.

There could be other measurements, such as security against crime and violence, social mobility, political stability, employment satisfaction or pride in country or community. No matter, the report’s six categories are as good as any. They measure up against those used by other studies of what makes countries happy.

Why study happiness? In part, because conventional economics (the “dismal science”) is dry and tends to focus on material well-being. Economics purports to study humanity, but it often seems content to kick out the humans.

Psychologists and others, including theologians of course, can attest that material things alone do not necessarily make people happy. Material affluence helps, but it does not count for everything, which is what the World Happiness Report shows in a rough sort of way.

So if Danes are the happiest people, where are Canadians? Turns out we stand sixth over all. And our happiness doesn’t derive from the relatively new “sunny ways” government, since the survey was taken from 2013 to 2015, when we were governed by the gloomy Stephen Harper.

The gap between Denmark and Canada is small. Quite likely, Canada doesn’t score first in any of the six categories but rather high enough in all to wind up sixth. Coming in No. 6 out of 157 countries isn’t half bad, to use typical Canadian understatement (now sadly being eroded by boastful politicians).

Since 2005-07, Canadians’ happiness has barely budged. Who got happier from 2005-07 (measured in an earlier survey) to 2013-15? A few unlikely places such as Nicaragua, Sierra Leone and Moldova. But also Uzbekistan, ruled by a dictator, and – wait for it – Russia.

The Russians cannot, one thinks, have become happier about their country’s recent economic standing, what with inflation high and growth low. Nor could they be pleased with the rampant corruption in the country, unless they had become inured to it long ago, which is likely. Maybe they are happier with their belief in Russia’s enhanced standing in the world through its grab of Crimea and intervention in Ukraine. Every hour, the propagandistic, Putin-controlled media tell Russians how proud they should be. And happy, too. As noted, economics does not entirely drive happiness.

Broadly speaking, the authors of the report suggest that people are happier when inequalities are attenuated.

The five happiest countries would suggest a link: Denmark, Switzerland, Iceland, Norway, Finland. But then Canada and Australia have greater income inequality than the top five countries but are almost as happy. Mexico, which has huge income inequalities, stands 21st on the index.

Another broad generalization: Latin America and the Caribbean are happier than Asia. Maybe Latinos do have more fun. Fourteen of the top 50 happiest countries are in Latin America or the Caribbean, compared with four from Asia, plus Australia and New Zealand. China comes 83rd; Taiwan 35th. No wonder so few Taiwanese want to become part of China.

The World Happiness Report arrives on the eve of the Canadian budget. The report suggests that economic well-being counts, but not for everything. And it seems happiness has a lot to do with aspects of society in which government plays no role.
 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
Simple. Make unhappy people migrate out and allow more happy migrants in. But law of nature states that there is always unhappy people who won't move. You make them go away the natural way by pricing healthcare out of their reach. Results will be clear in 20 years. You'll see.
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
singapore is number one in net happiness.

[video=youtube;A6K-U2skg28]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6K-U2skg28[/video]
 

JohnTan

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Generous Asset
The Europeans are only this happy because for the past few decades, they have been importing in millions of Muslims. Multiculturalism makes life happier for everyone.
 

Asterix

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Asset

You dumbfark stupid 70% Sinkies
Always so kiasu kiasi and kiaboh
Gostan is number one no need progress
Got cheap char kway teow happy oredi


[video=youtube;y-Z1BFLteSw]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-Z1BFLteSw[/video]
 
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