Global Times

Norway world’s ‘ happiest country’

UN report says Nordic nations most content, build social trust

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Norway displaced Denmark as the world’s happiest country in a new report released on Monday that called on nations to build social trust and equality to improve the well- being of their citizens.

The Nordic nations are the most content, according to the World Happiness Report 2017 produced by the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Solutions Network ( SDSN), a global initiative launched by the United Nations in 2012.

Countries in sub- Saharan Africa, along with Syria and Yemen, are the least happy of the 155 countries ranked in the fifth annual report released at the UN.

“Happy countries are the ones that have a healthy balance of prosperity, as convention­ally measured, and social capital, meaning a high degree of trust in a society, low inequality and confidence in government,” Jeffrey Sachs, the director of the SDSN and a special advisor to the United Nations SecretaryG­eneral, said in an interview.

The aim of the report, he added, is to provide another tool for government­s, business and civil society to help their countries find a better way to well- being.

Denmark, Iceland, Switzerlan­d, Finland, Netherland­s, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and Sweden rounded out the top ten countries.

South Sudan, Liberia, Guinea, Togo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Burundi and the Central African Republic were at the bottom. Germany was ranked 16, followed by the UK ( 19) and France ( 31). The US dropped one spot to 14.

Sachs said the United States is falling in the ranking due to inequality, distrust and corruption. Economic measures that the administra­tion of President Donald Trump is trying to pursue, he added, will make things worse.

“They are all aimed at increasing inequality – tax cuts at the top, throwing people off the healthcare rolls, cutting Meals on Wheels in order to raise military spending. I think everything that has been proposed goes in the wrong direction,” he explained.

The rankings are based on six factors -- per capita gross domestic product, healthy life expectancy, freedom, generosity, social support and absence of corruption in government or business.

“The lowest countries are typically marked by low values in all six variables,” said the report, produced with the support of the Ernesto Illy Foundation.

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