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Good day to be a finn-AGAIN.
For the 8th consecutive year, Finland has raised no.1 in the world’s annual happiness. The report, published by the International Day of Happiness in the UN, based on analysis of how residents of more than 140 countries rated their quality of life. In 10 definitions a person now says the best possible life they can imagine, finns come before having an average score of 7.74.
“They are rich, they are healthy, have social connections, social support, [and] A connection to the environment, “The University of Oxford’s Economic Professor, Leader of the Wellbeing Research Center and World Joy Editor, speaking wealth. “They are not happy, happy, dance to the streets typing people, but they are content with their lives.”
Finland was followed in Denmark (No.2), Iceland (No.3), Sweden (No.4), and the Netherlands (No.5). While Mexican (No.10) and Costa Rica (No.6) includes top 10 for the first time in the list history, the US falls in the lowest ranked no. 24. Last year, the US dropped from the top 20 For the first time since the 2012 Inaugural list.
Nordic countries, in the history of height, happier while the US is glad. While GDP per capita is a bit similar to nordic, US, Australia, and UK, the distribution of wealth distinguish them.
“In these nordic scandinavian countries, all boats, so the level of economic inequalities are smaller, and that appears well,” De neve said. “In Finland, most people will rate themselves as seven or eight, while you look at the distribution of the welfare of the states, many 10s there, but many.”
While the ranks announced by the GDP in a country per capita, andivic andiverid distividition, they found social trust and connection.
This year, researchers find a strong correlation between a person who believes well with others and their own knowing happiness. In the entire board, often, people reduce the goodness of others, like, as, if someone returns a lost wallet. It affects the benefit. Wallets returned to their owner at about double the rates of people thinking. However, as compared to the US, many people in Nordic countries believe that a lost purse is restored (and many people are likely to return it).
Keeping a strong sense of community with acts like a constant meal of others, for example, developing social trust and happiness, found the report. “If you believe much to others, or in other words, social, your individual benefit is higher,” De Neve. “Nordic countries, Scandinavian countries, are better, in the faith of others and the actual purse drop.”
As for Mexico and Costa Rica participating in the top 10 for the first of the list history, deve points of strength to social flarics in countries. Latin American countries report the highest number of shared foods and rank high in social connection and confidence. It helps to explain why their ranks reduced to the greater years of solitude (Deve Neve says 13 of 14 foods associated with the highest good measure).
“Not because of the long GDP and longest hope in life,” De Neve said about these two countries. “They took time to eat and eating others, there were friends, and it was not a source of social media, and so we chose it with data.”
Reports are published each year at the Wellbeing Research Center at the University of Oxford, including colleagues, including Gallup, the Editorial Solutions Solutions Network, and an editorial board of progress that has been analyzing the found pro bond.
Like de de neve dug by why Finland was watching over it, someone else happened to help them stand out from their Nordic counterparts.
“They are satisfied less,” he said. “They are smaller, and they are more lonely less. So they’re happy with what they got.”
Here are 25 happiest countries
For more happiness:
This story originally shown Fortune.com