Sunday, April 22, 2012

Filipino 38th happiest people in the world



Danes world’s happiest; Filipinos 38th
Philippine Daily Inquirer

Filed Under: Ratings, Research
WASHINGTON?Denmark, with its democracy, social equality and peaceful atmosphere, is the happiest country in the world, researchers said on Monday.

Zimbabwe, torn by political and social strife, is the least happy, while the world?s richest nation, the United States, ranks 16th.


The Philippines ranks 38th, just behind France (37) and also trailing other Southeast Asian nations Thailand (27), Singapore (31), Malaysia (34) and Vietnam (36). Japan places 43rd and China, 54th.

Overall, the world is getting happier, according to the US government-funded World Values Survey, which is done regularly by a global network of social scientists.

The survey found increased happiness from 1981 to 2007 in 45 of 52 countries analyzed.

?I strongly suspect that there is a strong correlation between peace and happiness,? said Ronald Inglehart, a political scientist at the University of Michigan?s Institute for Social Research, who directed the study.

And, there is a strong correlation between happiness and democracy, according to Ingelhart.

?Denmark is the happiest country in the world in our ratings,? Inglehart said in an audio statement released by the National Science Foundation, which paid for the analysis.

?Denmark is prosperous?not the richest country in the world but it is prosperous,? he added.

Puerto Rico and Colombia also rank highly, along with Northern Ireland, Iceland, Switzerland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Canada and Sweden.

?Though by no means the happiest country in the world, from a global perspective, the United States looks pretty good,? Inglehart said.

?The country is not only prosperous; it ranks relatively high in gender equality, tolerance of ethnic and social diversity and has high levels of political freedom.?

The survey, first done in 1981, has kept to two simple questions:

?Taking all things together, would you say you are very happy, rather happy, not very happy, not at all happy??

And, ?All things considered, how satisfied are you with your life as a whole these days??

Writing in the journal Perspectives on Psychological Science, Ingelhart?s team said they had surveyed 350,000 people.

Reuters 

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