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World Happiness Report 2024: Finland tops the list, India’s position same as last year

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World Happiness Report 2024: Finland tops the list, India’s position same as last year

World Happiness Report 2024: Finland tops the list, India’s position same as last year
March 20
19:11 2024

NEW DELHI, MAR 20 : Today is International Day of Happiness and the 2024 World Happiness Report has been released.

According to the report, India ranks 126, the same as last year, in the happiness index. Finland tops the overall list for the seventh successive year, though there is considerable movement elsewhere.

Experts use responses from people in more than 140 nations to rank the world’s ‘happiest’ countries.

Serbia (37th) and Bulgaria (81st) have had the biggest increases in average life evaluation scores since they were first measured by the Gallup World Poll in 2013, and this is reflected in climbs up the rankings between World Happiness Report 2013 and this 2024 edition of 69 places for Serbia and 63 places for Bulgaria.

The next two countries showing the largest increases in life evaluations are Latvia (46th) and Congo (Brazzaville) (89th), with rank increases of 44 and 40 places, respectively, between 2013 and 2024.

Significantly, the United States of America (23rd) has fallen out of the top 20 for the first time since the World Happiness Report was first published in 2012, driven by a large drop in the wellbeing of Americans under 30. Afghanistan remains bottom of the overall rankings as the world’s ‘unhappiest’ nation.

Observing the state of happiness among the world’s children and adolescent population, researchers found that, globally, young people aged 15 to 24 report higher life satisfaction than older adults, but this gap is narrowing in Europe and recently reversed in North America.

Findings also suggest that the wellbeing of 15- to 24-year-olds has fallen in North America, Western Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, and South Asia since 2019 – but in the rest of world it has risen. Overall, though, there is a notable global scarcity of wellbeing data available for children below the age of 15.

A team of researchers used a large survey of life satisfaction of older adults in the world’s most populous nation: India. They found that within this older Indian population, increasing age is associated with higher life satisfaction, matching the findings of the global analyses.

These researchers also analysed the complex impact of India’s caste system on wellbeing among older adults, though satisfaction with living arrangements, perceived discrimination and self-rated health emerged as the top three predictors of life satisfaction in this study.

-The New Indian Express

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