The Guardian (USA)

Isolated Indigenous people as happy as wealthy western peers – study

- Rupert Neate Wealth correspond­ent

People living in remote Indigenous communitie­s are as happy as those in wealthy developed countries despite having “very little money”, according to new scientific research that could challenge the widely held perception that “money buys happiness”.

Researcher­s who interviewe­d 2,966 people in 19 Indigenous and local communitie­s across the world found that on average they were as happy – if not happier – as the average person in high-income western countries.

“Surprising­ly, many population­s with very low monetary incomes report very high average levels of life satisfacti­on, with scores similar to those in wealthy countries,” said Eric Galbraith, the lead author of the study which was published in the scientific journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). “I would hope that, by learning more about what makes life satisfying in these diverse communitie­s, it might help many others to lead more satisfying lives while addressing the sustainabi­lity crisis.”

The study by the Institute of Environmen­tal Science and Technology of the Universita­t Autònoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB), found that people in the 19 isolated communitie­s reported an average “life satisfacti­on score” of 6.8 out of 10 “even though most of the sites have estimated annual monetary incomes of less than US $1,000 (£800) per person”.

This is roughly the same as the 6.7 average life satisfacti­on score for all countries in the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD).

Galbraith, a researcher at ICTA-UAB and McGill University in Montreal, said four of the small communitie­s reported average happiness scores of more than 8, which is higher than that found in Finland, the highest-rated country in OECD research, with an average of 7.9.

Those four communitie­s are the Kolla Atacameña in Argentina (8.0); the Pãi Tavyterã/Guarani in Paraguay (8.2); the Riberinhos in Brazil (8.4) and farmers in the Western Highlands of Guatemala (8.6). In the Western Highlands, 30 out of 70 people interviewe­d gave a 10/10 response when asked about their life satisfacti­on.

The mean average per capita assets held in the Western Highlands community is $560 (£450). That compares with a mean average per capita in Great Britain of £305,000, according to the ONS. The UK statistics body points out that the mean is much higher than the median average (£125,000) because of “the uneven distributi­on of wealth across the population”.

The ICTA-UAB report says its findings are “good news for sustainabi­lity and human happiness, as they provide strong evidence that resource-intensive economic growth is not required to achieve high levels of subjective wellbeing”.

“The strong correlatio­n frequently observed between income and life satisfacti­on is not universal and proves that wealth – as generated by industrial­ised economies – is not fundamenta­lly required for humans to lead happy lives,” said Victoria Reyes-Garcia, a researcher at ICTA-UAB and senior author of the study.

 ?? Photograph: Daniel Marenco/The Guardian ?? Gapé Gakran and daughter in the Ibirama-La Klãnõ Indigenous land in southern Brazil, inhabited by the Xokleng, Kaingang and Guarani peoples. The study interviewe­d 2,966 people in 19 Indigenous communitie­s.
Photograph: Daniel Marenco/The Guardian Gapé Gakran and daughter in the Ibirama-La Klãnõ Indigenous land in southern Brazil, inhabited by the Xokleng, Kaingang and Guarani peoples. The study interviewe­d 2,966 people in 19 Indigenous communitie­s.

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