The happiest people in the world live in Switzerland, a new
study found.
The third World Happiness Report, released by the U.N.’s
Sustainable Development Solutions Network on Thursday, ranked 158 countries
based on Gallup surveys from 2012-15 and analyzed the key factors contributing
to happiness levels.
Switzerland, Iceland, Denmark, Norway and Canada were the
top five happiest countries, while the West African nation of Togo was the least
happy. The report aims to provide policymakers around the world with new
metrics that place a higher emphasis on subjective well-being. While income
appeared to play a significant role in boosting happiness—the GDP per capita is
25 times higher in the 10 happiest countries than in the 10 least happy—it was
far from the only factor.
Life expectancy, social connections, personal freedom,
generosity and corruption levels also helped explain the happiness scores,
according to the report. The U.S., for example, ranked 15th in the world, one
below Mexico and three below Costa Rica, where per capita GDP is roughly a
fifth of that in the U.S. “This report gives evidence on how to achieve
societal well-being,” Jeffrey Sachs, the director of the Earth Institute at Columbia
University, said in a statement.
“It’s not by money alone, but also by fairness, honesty,
trust, and good health.” But sharp economic changes in a country can play a
role in people’s happiness, the report found.
Greece, where the global recession triggered prolonged
economic turmoil, saw its happiness levels fall the most since 2005-07,
compared to 125 other countries where data was available. Still, the report
warned policymakers against overemphasizing income levels. “When countries
pursue GDP in a lopsided manner, forgetting about social and environmental
objectives, the results can be adverse for human well-being,” the report said. “Many
countries in recent years have achieved economic growth at the cost of the
sharply rising inequalities of income and grave damage to the natural
environment.”




