
The UN World Happiness Report (WHR) 2018 has ranked Bhutan as the 97th happiest country in the world out of 156 countries. The report was released on March 14, ahead of the International Day of Happiness which is celebrated on March 20.
Although Bhutan’s rank has remained the same out of 155 countries in 2017, Bhutan has dropped 13 places from its previous rank of 84 in the list of 157 countries in 2016. Overall, Bhutan scored 5.082 in the “happy index” according to the report.
The report, which is created by the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network, is based on factors like per capita GDP, social support, healthy life expectancy, social freedom, generosity, and the absence of corruption. Rising from fifth place last year to oust Norway from the top spot, Finland topped the rank this year. The country scored 7.632 in the happy index.
The top five countries are the same ones in the WHR 2017, except for Finland that vaulted to the top this year. Norway took the 2nd spot, followed by Denmark, Iceland and Switzerland in 3rd, 4th, and 5th places respectively. The Netherlands is 6th, Canada 7th, and New Zealand is placed in the 8th position. Australia, which was in the 9th position last year, is 10th this year, and Sweden, which was ranked 10th in 2017, took the 9th position this year.
Among the SAARC countries, Bhutan is behind Pakistan, which stands at the 75th place. However, Bhutan is still ahead of Nepal, which is at the 101st position, Bangladesh at 115, Sri Lanka at 116, India at 133 while Afghanistan is placed at 145th position. Maldives did not feature in the WHR this year.
Respondents were asked to value their lives on a scale from 0 to 10, with the worst possible life as a 0 and the best possible life as a 10, the report stated. “It is important to consider not just average happiness in a community or country, but also how it is distributed.”
The scores were based on individuals’ own assessments of their subjective well-being and use all survey available since the start of the Gallup World Poll in 2005. This is the sixth WHR since 2012. The central purpose of the report is to survey the science of measuring and understanding subjective well-being.
The special focus of the 172-page report is on migration. The report stated that rural-urban migration within countries has been far larger than international migration, especially in the developing world.
“If rural-urban migration within countries is an age-old phenomenon, large-scale international migration has increased greatly in recent years due to globalisation,” the report stated.
“Migration within and between countries has in general shifted people from less to more productive work, and from lower to higher incomes.” – Courtesy Bhutan Times