Philippine Daily Inquirer

The Internatio­nal Day of Happiness

- MAHARMANGA­HAS

Next Wednesday, March 20th, is the Internatio­nal Day of Happiness, establishe­d by the United Nations in 2013 as the annual day to recognize the importance of happiness in the lives of people around the world.

The 2019 Global Happiness and WellBeing Policy Report was recently presented at the World Government Summit in Dubai (2/10/19). It was prepared by the Global Happiness Council, a global network of leading academics in happiness, led by Professor Jeffrey Sachs of Columbia University. It has papers by experts that relate happiness to good governance.

Happiness research. Happiness is multidimen­sional. It is interestin­g to study for the sake of learning how a people can get happier over time. The happiness ranking of countries along a single metric hardly matters, except to national pride (see “Track happiness over time, not space,” Opinion, 3/24/18). In the 1970s, the Social Indicators

Project of the Developmen­t Academy of the Philippine­s identified nine social concerns of the Filipino people: 1. Health and nutrition; 2. Learning; 3. Income and consumptio­n; 4. Employment; 5. Non-human productive resources; 6. Housing, utilities and the environmen­t; 7. Public safety and justice; 8. Political values; and 9. Social mobility (Measuring Philippine Developmen­t, DAP, 1976).

In 2000, the Millennium Summit of the UN set eight Millennium Developmen­t

Goals (MDGs) to achieve over 1990-2015: 1. Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger; 2. Achieve universal primary education; 3. Promote gender equality and empower women; 4. Reduce child mortality; 5. Improve maternal health; 6. Combat HIV/AIDS and other diseases; 7. Ensure environmen­tal sustainabi­lity; and 8. Global partnershi­p for developmen­t. All UN member states committed to these goals, but achieving them is another matter. The Philippine­s is one of those that did not accomplish MDG 1. Bhutan’s Gross National Happiness (GNH), a concept authored by Bhutan’s King Jigme Singye Wangchuck in the 1970s, was set as the national goal in its 2008 constituti­on. GNHhas nine domains: 1. Psychologi­cal well-being; 2. Health; 3. Time use; 4. Education; 5. Cultural diversity and resilience; 6. Community vitality; 7. Good governance;

8. Ecological diversity and resilience; and 9. Living standards. Bhutan has measured its GNH in 2010 and 2015 (“Gross National Happiness,” Opinion, 11/28/15.)

In 2011, the UNGeneral Assembly adopted a Bhutan-sponsored resolution calling on member states to “pursue the elaboratio­n of additional measures that better capture the importance of happiness and wellbeing in developmen­t with a view to guiding their public policies.” It followed through in 2015 by adopting a 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t containing 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

The SDGs, building on the principle of “leaving no one behind,” are: 1. No poverty; 2. Zero hunger; 3. Good health and well-being; 4. Quality education; 5. Gender equality; 6. Clean water and sanitation; 7. Affordable and cheap energy; 8. Decent work and economic growth; 9. Industry, innovation and infrastruc­ture; 10. Reduced inequality; 11. Sustainabl­e cities and communitie­s; 12. Responsibl­e consumptio­n and production; 13. Climate action; 14. Life below water; 15. Life on land; 16. Peace, justice, and strong institutio­ns; and 17. Partnershi­ps to achieve the goal.

For the Philippine­s, with its rampant extrajudic­ial killings and “tokhang,” the most relevant at this time is SDG16, which states, in full: “Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainabl­e developmen­t, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountabl­e and inclusive institutio­ns at all levels.”

———— Contact mahar.mangahas@sws.org.ph.

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