India one of the unhappiest nations???

insouciance thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#1

India among unhappiest nations; Denmark happiest

October 17, 2006

Feeling sad? Researchers at Britain's University of Leicester reckon you might just be in the wrong country. According to Adrian White, an analytic social psychologist at Leicester who developed the first "World Map of Happiness," Denmark is the happiest nation in the world. White's research used a battery of statistical data, plus the subjective responses of 80,000 people worldwide, to map out well-being across 178 countries. Denmark and five other European countries, including Switzerland, Austria, and Iceland, came out in the top 10, while Zimbabwe and Burundi pulled up the bottom. Not surprisingly, the countries that are happiest are those that are healthy, wealthy, and wise. "The most significant factors were health, the level of poverty, and access to basic education," White says. Population size also plays a role. Smaller countries with greater social cohesion and a stronger sense of national identity tended to score better, while those with the largest populations fared worse. China came in No. 82, India ranked 125, and Russia was 167. The U.S. came in at 23. It's subjective White's study, to be published later this year, was developed in part as a response to the British media's fascination with life satisfaction. A recent BBC survey concluded that 81% of Britain's population would rather the government make them happier than richer. Despite its often bleak weather, England ranked relatively happy at 41. "There is increasing political interest in using measures of happiness as a national indicator along with measures of wealth," White says. "We wanted to illustrate the effects of global poverty on subjective well-being to remind people that if they want to address unhappiness as an issue the need is greatest in other parts of the world." To produce the "Happy Map," White dug deep. He analyzed data from a variety of sources including UNESCO, the CIA, The New Economics Foundation, and the World Health Organization. He then examined the responses of 80,000 people surveyed worldwide. Money still counts Good health may be the key to happiness, but money helps open the door. Wealthier countries, such as Switzerland (2) and Luxembourg (10) scored high on the index. Not surprisingly, most African countries, which have little of either; scored poorly. Zimbabwe, which has an AIDS rate of 25%, an average life expectancy of 39, and an 80% poverty rate, ranked near the bottom at 177. Meanwhile, the conflict between the Hutus and Tutsis gave fellow Africans in Burundi, ranked 178, even less to smile about, despite their having a slightly lower poverty rate of 68%. Capitalism, meanwhile, fared quite well. Free-market systems are sometimes blamed for producing unhappiness due to insecurity and competition, but the U.S. was No. 23 and all the top-ranking European countries are firmly capitalist -- albeit of a social-democratic flavor. White says the only real surprise in his findings was how low many Asian countries scored. China is 82, Japan 90, and India an unhappy 125. "These are countries that are thought as having a strong sense of collective identity, which other researchers have associated with well-being," he says. Are we happy yet? White admits that happiness is subjective. But he defends his research on the grounds that his study focused on life satisfaction rather than brief emotional states. "The frustrations of modern life, and the anxieties of the age, seem to be much less significant compared to the health, financial, and educational needs in other parts of the world."

One of the study's intentions was to see how Britain, given media preoccupation with well-being, fared compared to other parts of the globe. His conclusion: "The current concern with happiness levels in the U.K. may well be a case of the 'worried well.'"

So,do you agree,that India is indeed one of the most unhappiest countries

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sowmyaa thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#2
buffie, thanks for sharing this article. Interesting!! I will get back to my response later but really good topic. 👏
Minnie thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#3
Thank buffie !!!

For now I will just say that the litany of complaints any average Indian has surpaases all that I have come across. My friend who went to India after her baby was born ended up having diarrhea after eating gol gappe at Haldiram. She is born and brought up in Delhi, and yet now she is paranoid to even think of Gol gappas......

This might look unrelated, but in truth it reflects the standard of hygeine and the level of pollution that an average Indian has to struggle with in daily life. And this actually is the least of the concerns for this beautiful country....
bhilwara thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#4
This study actually defines happiness and then ranks each country based on those criteria. Dr. White thinks happiness is most closely associated with health, wealth and access to education. It assumes materialism helps fulfillment of higher needs, which ultimately contribute to happiness.
Anyway...happiness is an attribute of the individual so I don't fathom the concept of "Happy Nation"!
noorejahaan thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#5
the responses of 80,000 ppl worldwide? that's not very many at all.. 😕
amico thumbnail
Posted: 19 years ago
#6

Originally posted by: Noor_64

the responses of 80,000 ppl worldwide? that's not very many at all.. 😕

That was going to be my point. It's really absurd when you think about it.

punjini thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#7
Frankly, I find the Indians outside India wistfully recalling their days in India as ones filled with unadulterated happiness, compared to the materialistic, rushed lives they lead as NRIs.

These are the remarks I have often heard:

"You can just drop in without warning at any friend's place for lunch or dinner - that's our India"

"The shopkeepers know us and greet us like friends there."

"The train journeys were so much fun! We would start chatting with complete strangers and become great friends by the time the journey ended!"

"Oh the taste of the food in India! Fresh fragrant masalas! Atta straight out of the mill! Makki ki roti! Sarson ka saag!"
TallyHo thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#8
It might be the unhappiest but its never boring...given half a chance I would like to be reborn as an Indian! 😃
198646 thumbnail
Posted: 19 years ago
#9
Percentile wise, Indians are the happiest of the whole lot.
Those who have defined what happiness is and have done the survey do not know what true happiness is all about!!
mermaid_QT thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#10
Thanks buffie for the article.

First of all, I am still waiting for someone to define happiness..
Secondly, Who does these sort of polls? 80,000 as someone suggested is not a meaningful number to begin with! Got a statistician POLL STARTERS??
Furthermore, if they use the same test subjects, over a span of 3 months, the result errors will be beyond standard deviation 🤢 🤢 🤢 everyone is happy one day and sad the other.

People doing such surveys could definitely use their time for better things.
But thanks for the article buffie. makes one think.

qt

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