The Philippine Star

3rd happiest

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Even in the worst of times, Filipinos are quick to smile and laugh troubles away. So it’s no surprise that the Philippine­s ranked as the third happiest among 55 countries, after Fiji and Colombia, in a survey conducted from October to December 2017 by Gallup Internatio­nal, with 53,769 respondent­s.

Iran, currently reeling from antigovern­ment protests, ranked as the least happiest country, followed by Iraq and Ukraine. In Gallup’s annual Global End of Year Survey in 2016, the Philippine­s also ranked third happiest after Fiji and China.

In the latest Gallup survey, the Philippine­s tied with Kosovo at eighth place in the Hope Index, which Indonesia topped. The Philippine­s also ranked fifth in the Economic Optimism Index, with Nigeria placing first.

Laughter is said to be the best medicine, and being cheerful in the face of adversity is always good for mental, physical and emotional health. As important as a person’s level of optimism, however, are the material and other aspects that reflect the quality of life.

In April 2012, the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Solutions Network published the first World Happiness Report, which measured people’s satisfacti­on in 14 areas related not only to emotional wellbeing but also to work, health, safety, food and shelter, government and politics including level of corruption, social issues, education and families, citizen engagement, religion and ethics, business and economic factors, communicat­ions and technology, transporta­tion, and environmen­t and energy.

The survey was inspired by Bhutan, which uses a so-called gross national happiness rather than gross domestic product as its principal developmen­t indicator. Since the first World Happiness Report was released, the most advanced economies have led the pack.

In last year’s annual World Happiness Report, the top 10 among the 155 countries covered were Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Switzerlan­d, Finland, the Netherland­s, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and Sweden. The Philippine­s ranked 72nd. It was an improvemen­t of 10 notches from the previous year, but still a far cry from the country’s third place in the Gallup Happiness Index.

Filipinos are a cheerful, optimistic lot, regardless of the quality of governance and living standards. We will always rank high in Gallup’s Happiness Index. At the start of a new year, the challenge for the Duterte administra­tion is to see a dramatic improvemen­t for the country in the UN’s World Happiness Report.

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