The Mercury News

World report: US not so happy

- By Alex Horton

For the second consecutiv­e year, the United States has taken a tumble in the World Happiness Report’s annual ranking of more than 150 countries, published by the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Solutions Network, a United Nations initiative.

The 2018 report was released Wednesday, ahead of the U.N.’s Internatio­nal Day of Happiness, and it has the United States ranked 18th.

That’s down four spots from a year ago — and America’s worst showing since the annual report was introduced in 2012. The United States has never cracked the Top 10.

Finland is No. 1, edging out Norway, the 2017World Happiness Report champion. Denmark was third, followed by Iceland and Switzerlan­d.

The bottom three in the 156- nation list were Burundi, Central African Republic and South Sudan - all three of which have struggled with conflict and instabilit­y.

As immigratio­n continues to play a major role in elections around the world, the report’s authors wanted to know how the feelings of migrants change once they arrive in their adopted homeland.

They were surprised at what the data showed.

“The most striking finding is the extent to which happiness of immigrants matches the locally born population,” John Helliwell, a University of British Columbia economist who co- edited the report, told The Washington Post. “The happiest countries in the world also have the happiest immigrants in the world.”

Why measure happiness? Some experts say that it is a better measure of a nation’s progress and that using social well-being as a goal drives better public policy, the report noted.

The statistici­ans weighed six variables, according to the report: Income, healthy life expectancy, social support, freedom and generosity. The data was compiled fromthe Gallup World Poll, which uses a measure called the “Cantril ladder.”

People are asked to envision a ladder, with their “best possible life” being a 10 on the top rung. Their worst possible life is a 0.

Data harvested from the surveys from 2005 to 2015 points to a thorough and quick adaptabili­ty of happiness among migrants in their new countries, Helliwell said. The three happiest countries for the foreignbor­n mirror the native-born findings: Finland again takes the top spot, and Denmark and Norway swapped places to become two and three.

How migrants arrive and how welcome they are once they do can be tied to several factors, according to the report. Moderate flows of migrants were more tolerable for the native born than big influxes of new arrivals, and unskilled immigrants tend to rattle unskilled workers fearful of being displaced.

“The attitude of immigrants is also important — if they are to find and accept opportunit­ies to connect with the local population­s, this is better for everyone,” the report found.

In 2017, no country fell farther on the Cantril ladder than Venezuela. Massive civil unrest, severe hunger and a failed economy have triggered a mass exodus described as a humanitari­an crisis.

Last year, Venezuela was 82nd in the World Happiness Report. This year? 102nd.

There were common threads to most of the topranked countries on the list. Income is the biggest factor; the GDP per capita in the top 10 is 30 times as high as the bottom10 countries. But Helliwell said that does not always translate to happiness among individual­s. Belonging and respect in civil society also play vital roles.

Happiness has been eroding in America in recent years, the study found.

Obesity, substance abuse (including the opioid epidemic) and depression offset the happiness that often comes with the kind of economic growth the United States has seen since 1972, the report said.

“Social support networks in the U. S. have weakened over time; perception­s of corruption in government and business have risen over time; and confidence in public institutio­ns has waned,” the report said.

Helliwell said happier countries tend to spend more time thinking about extending advantages to future generation­s. For instance, Norway has conserved its vast oil reserves and has invested revenue, he said, insulating the economy from erratic energy prices that contribute­d to Venezuela’s instabilit­y.

“To do this successful­ly requires high levels of mutual trust, shared purpose, generosity and good governance, all factors that help to keep Norway and other top countries where they are in the happiness rankings,” the report found last year.

If the United States and other countries want positive examples, they should look to Latin America, the report suggests.

The region is beset by lower confidence in institutio­ns, vast income disparitie­s and some of the world’s most violent cities due to the global drug trade. And yet ...

“High happiness in Latin America is neither an anomaly nor an oddity,” the report says. “It is explained by the abundance of family warmth and other supportive social relationsh­ips frequently sidelined in favor of an emphasis on income. ... Relationsh­ips are important for people’s happiness; and that positive relationsh­ips are abundant in Latin America.”

Last year’s World Happiness Report included a chapter called “Restoring American Happiness.”

The author of that chapter, economist Jeffrey D. Sachs, said America’s declining happiness is “a social crisis, not an economic crisis,” writing: “This American social crisis is widely noted, but it has not translated into public policy. Almost all of the policy discourse in Washington DC centers on naive attempts to raise the economic growth rate, as if a higher growth rate would somehow heal the deepening divisions and angst in American society. This kind of growth-only agenda is doubly wrong-headed.”

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