User:Zenggongtao/沙盒

维基百科,自由的百科全书
World Happiness Report 2017 score shown on a map of the world. Darker shades of green show a higher score with darker shades of red showing a lower one.

The World Happiness Report is an annual publication of the United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network which contains rankings of national happiness and analysis of the data from various perspectives.[1] The World Happiness Report is edited by John F. Helliwell, Richard Layard and Jeffrey Sachs. The 2017 edition added three associate editors; Jan-Emmanuel De Neve,[2] Haifang Huang,[3] and Shun Wang.[4] Authors of chapters include Richard Easterlin, Edward F. Diener, Martine Durand,[5] Nicole Fortin,[6] Jon Hall,[7] Valerie Møller,[8] and many others.

In July 2011, the UN General Assembly resolution 65/309 Happiness: Towards a Holistic Definition of Development[9] inviting member countries to measure the happiness of their people and to use the data to help guide public policy. On April 2, 2012, this was followed by the first UN High Level Meeting called Wellbeing and Happiness: Defining a New Economic Paradigm,[10] which was chaired by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and Prime Minister Jigme Thinley of Bhutan, a nation that adopted gross national happiness instead of gross domestic product as their main development indicator.[11]

The first World Happiness Report was released on April 1, 2012 as a foundational text for the UN High Level Meeting: Well-being and Happiness: Defining a New Economic Paradigm,[12] drawing international attention.[13] The report outlined the state of world happiness, causes of happiness and misery, and policy implications highlighted by case studies. In 2013, the second World Happiness Report was issued, and since then has been issued on an annual basis with the exception of 2014.[14] The report primarily uses data from the Gallup World Poll. Each annual report is available to the public to download on the World Happiness Report website.[15]

In the reports, experts in fields including economics, psychology, survey analysis, and national statistics, describe how measurements of well-being can be used effectively to assess the progress of nations, and other topics. Each report is organized by chapters that delve deeper into issues relating to happiness, including mental illness, the objective benefits of happiness, the importance of ethics, policy implications, and links with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's (OECD) approach to measuring subjective well-being and other international and national efforts.

As of March 2018, Finland was ranked the happiest country in the world.[16][17]

Annual Report Topics[编辑]

World Happiness Reports were issued in 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016 (an update) and 2017. In addition to ranking countries happiness and well-being levels, each report has contributing authors and most focus on a subject. The data used to rank countries in each report is drawn from the Gallup World Poll,[18] as well as other sources such as the World Values Survey, in some of the reports. The Gallup World Poll questionnaire[19] measures 14 areas within its core questions: (1) business & economic, (2) citizen engagement, (3) communications & technology, (4) diversity (social issues), (5) education & families, (6) emotions (well-being), (7) environment & energy, (8) food & shelter, (9) government and politics, (10) law & order (safety), (11) health, (12) religion and ethics, (13) transportation, and (14) work.

2018 World Happiness Report[编辑]

The 2018 reiteration was released on 14 March and focused on the relation between happiness and migration. As per 2018 Happiness Report, Finland is the happiest country in the world,[20] with Norway, Denmark, Iceland, and Switzerland holding the next top positions. The World Happiness Report 2018 ranks 156 countries by their happiness levels, and 117 countries by the happiness of their immigrants. The main focus of this year’s report, in addition to its usual ranking of the levels and changes in happiness around the world, is on migration within and between countries. The overall rankings of country happiness are based on the pooled results from Gallup World Poll surveys from 2015-2017, and show both change and stability. Four different countries have held the top spot in the last four reports: Denmark, Switzerland, Norway and now Finland. All the top countries tend to have high values for all six of the key variables that have been found to support well-being: income, healthy life expectancy, social support, freedom, trust and generosity. Among the top countries, differences are small enough that that year-to-year changes in the rankings are to be expected.

The analysis of happiness changes from 2008-2010 to 2015-2015 shows Togo as the biggest gainer, moving up 17 places in the overall rankings from the 2015. The biggest loser is Venezuela, down 2.2 points. Five of the report’s seven chapters deal primarily with migration, as summarized in Chapter 1. For both domestic and international migrants, the report studies the happiness of those migrants and their host communities, and also of those in the countryside or in the country of origin. The results are generally positive. Perhaps the most striking finding of the whole report is that a ranking of countries according to the happiness of their immigrant populations is almost exactly the same as for the rest of the population. The immigrant happiness rankings are based on the full span of Gallup data from 2005 to 2017, sufficient to have 117 countries with more than 100 immigrant respondents. The ten happiest countries in the overall rankings also make up ten of the top eleven spots in the ranking of immigrant happiness. Finland is at the top of both rankings in this report, with the happiest immigrants, and the happiest population in general. While convergence to local happiness levels is quite rapid, it is not complete, as there is a ‘footprint’ effect based on the happiness in each source country. This effect ranges from 10% to 25%. This footprint effect explains why immigrant happiness is less than that of the locals in the happiest countries, while being greater in the least happy countries.

2017 World Happiness Report[编辑]

Descriptions

The 2017 World Happiness Report has seven chapters: (1) Overview, (2) Social Foundations of World Happiness, (3) Growth and Happiness in China, 1990-2015, (4) ‘Waiting for Happiness’ in Africa, (5) The Key Determinants of Happiness and Misery, (6) Happiness at Work, and (7) Restoring American Happiness.

Chapter 1, Overview is written by John F. Helliwell, Richard Layard and Jeffrey Sachs. The chapter gives an overview of the report and celebrates the progress of the happiness movement, citing the OECD’s commitment “to redefine the growth narrative to put people’s well-being at the centre of governments’ efforts,” and events including the UAE’s Dialogue on Global Happiness[21] (part of the 2017 World Government Summit) and other meetings and conferences. It confirms future World Happiness Reports, with 2018 focusing on migration and giving thanks to the support of Ernesto Illy Foundation.[22]

Chapter 2, Social Foundations of World Happiness is written by John F. Helliwell, Hailing Huang, and Shun Wang. This chapter gives an overview, or primer, on how happiness is measured in World Happiness Reports (use of the Cantril Ladder to measure satisfaction with life, and measurements six variables to understand changes in satisfaction with life: social support, income, healthy life expectancy, trust in government and business, perceived freedom to make life decisions, and generosity. The chapter include a rationale for the approach (“that life evaluations vary more than emotions across countries and that life evaluations are “much more fully explained by life circumstances than emotional reports”) and explains why the World Happiness Reports do not use an index (composite indicators): (1) A Satisfaction with Life measurement captures “the evaluation people make of their own lives,” (2) life evaluation data is new knowledge and it can be used to identify what “supports better lives,” (3) the data comes from populations in each country so it represents the people of that country, (4) the data does not depend on an index-maker’s opinion on what is important, but does reflect what people’s own evaluation of their lives. The chapter gives rankings for countries happiness levels with graphs and explanations about trends and changes in ranking levels. Analysis of role affect (feelings) plays is consistent with prior World Happiness Reports: positive affect contributes to satisfaction with life more than negative affect, and the six factors, while explaining changes in satisfaction with life, do not fully explain changes in affect. The chapter concludes with findings that social and institutional factors (having someone to count on in difficult times, donating, trust in government and business, freedom to make life choices) factors are “together responsible for more than half of the average difference between each country’s predicted” satisfaction with life score and that social factors are 16 times more impactful than increasing income in the poorest nations, and that satisfaction with life scores would increase by two points (1.97; composed of someone to count on in times of trouble accounting at1.19, freedom to make life choices at 0.41, generosity at 0.25 and trust at 0.12 ) on a scale of 0-10 if social foundation effects were increased in the lowest ranking countries, with examples of Greece, where social support was low and life satisfactions scores continue to fall (“third biggest happiness looser”) after the economic crisis of 2007, and of Iceland, where social support was high and life satisfaction scores increased after the economic crisis enough to put it as the third happiest country in the years 2014-2016.

Chapter 3, Growth and Happiness in China, 1990-2015 is written by Richard A. Easterlin, Fei Wang,[23] and Shun Wang. This chapter analyzes the trends and causes of increased income levels and decreased subjective well-being in China in the last 25 years where GDP increased 5-fold in the last 25 years, while subjective well-being has been on the decline for the last 15 years, with current levels lower than they were 15 years ago, even with an upward trend since 2005, albeit the lowest income segment of the populations suffered much more than the highest income segment and people with a college education “largely escaped the adverse impact on life satisfaction of economic restructuring.” Data is sourced from the World Values Survey, Gallup, Horizon Research Consultancy Group,[24] and Chinese Social Survey.[25] The chapter uses data to analyzes outcomes of policy decisions to promote large corporations at the expense of small enterprises, yielding output growth at the expense of high unemployment. Analysis of data suggests that unemployment, diminishment in social safety nets (unemployment benefits, health care, pensions, having someone to count on in times of trouble, etc.), and rises in material aspirations explain the overall decline in happiness levels in China, and that of these factors, the ones that matter most are those that people “think they have, or should have, some ability to control": income security, family life, the health of oneself and one’s family.

Chapter 4, ‘Waiting for Happiness’ in Africa, is written by Valerie Møller, Benjamin Roberts, Habib Tilouine,[26] and Jay Loschky. This chapter analyzes the reasons for the low scores in satisfaction with life and life conditions in the 54 nations that are in Africa, where historically and currently, most African countries scores dominate the bottom of the charts (and scoring 5 or below). Data sources are the Afrobarometer, Ibrahim Index of African Governance (IIAG), the Arab Barometer, Children’s World,[27] and Gallup. The chapter discusses data collection issues, ranging from cultural context to access to populations. It includes an analysis of good governance and happiness, identifying a lasting sense of unmet expectations for changes in the conditions of life that were expected to emerge after liberation from colonial and authoritarian rule as partly explaining low life satisfaction scores as well as an unmet demand for civil liberties, especially freedom of speech. Data analyzed also revealed that while satisfaction with democracy is “weakly positively associated with happiness…a ‘democratic deficit’…depresses levels of happiness,” and that in the nation of South Africa there is a willingness to give up regular election for a secure sense of law and order, indicating a trend for the resurgence of authoritarian regimes. Findings about of the role of corruption and happiness include that “happiness improved markedly…where citizens saw a reduction in corruption at the top level of leadership and stronger government performance in fighting corruption. It examines the impact of changes in lived poverty, finding that freedom from deprivations in many of the countries in Africa has been accomplished and accounts for increases in happiness scores of about 0.6 percent in some nations. It examines infrastructure and finds that 93% of people in Africa have cell phone service, while only 30% have access to sewage treatment and 65% live in communities with access to an electrical grid, with people in North Africa enjoying more infrastructure benefits than in South Africa, and a positive association between the state of infrastructure and happiness. The chapter includes analysis of African youth, suggesting that IT-connection (cell phones), expectations higher standards of living, and “exceptional” high levels of optimism can serve as a “self-fulfilling prophecy for the continent,” giving Arab Spring and the migration of Africans looking for work overseas as evidence, and identifying the need for employment in all countries in Africa.

Chapter 5, The Key Determinants of Happiness and Misery, is written by Andrew Clark, Sara Flèche, Richard Layard, Nattavudh Powdhavee[28] and George Ward. This chapter analyzes the causes for happiness and misery in the United States, Australia, Great Britain and Indonesia, measured by economic (income and employment ), social (education and partnership/marriage) and health (mental and physical) variables stemming from one’s immediate influences (what is happening now in one’s life) and distant influences (one’s past: one’s childhood, schooling and family of origin). The chapter proposes a definition of misery that is a below a certain level of life satisfaction and identifies the factors that causes misery: mental illness (depression and anxiety disorders), physical illness, poverty, low education, unemployment, and living alone, with mental illness being the key factor in Western countries. The chapter includes a section on crime and behavior, stating “it is well known that how others behave is a major influence on our own happiness” and research that indicates that “education has a major benefit through resolving reduction” of crime committed by a person, which increases happiness levels overall as “crime rates on average reduces life satisfaction of (a) local population…” Analysis of child development indicates that the emotional health and behavior (mental health) of a child are better predictors of an adult’s happiness than academic performance, and that the mental health of the mother and the effect of schools and teachers (“which school a child went to...predicts as much of how the child develops as [parenting]”) are the best predictors of a child’s mental health. It concludes with an appeal to policy makers to “know the causes of happiness and misery."

Chapter 6, Happiness at Work, is written by Jan-Emmanuel De Neve and George Ward. This chapter focuses on the roles employment, job type, and workplace environment play on subjective well-being, using “the terms happiness and well-being interchangeably.” Data is sourced from Gallup, the European Social Survey and the German Socio-Economic Panel. Research findings include that worldwide, the employed are happier (have higher life satisfaction scores). In contrast, for the unemployed, happiness levels do not adapt significantly over time, they experience more stress and worry, and that a series of employment experiences can scar a person, leaving a lasting negative impact on a person’s happiness levels as well as a nation’s well-being levels (these are some of the “damaging effects of joblessness”). Men suffer more from unemployment women, although both suffer. Moreover, research findings indicate that rising unemployment levels has a negative impact on everyone, even the employed. It finds that those who opt to work part-time by choice have higher life satisfaction scores and fewer negative experiences (stress, worry). The chapter analysis of types of employment finds that management and professional workers have higher levels of life satisfaction and more positive experiences (smiling, laughing, enjoyment, feeling well-rested) than manual labor jobs, but that “job fit” is highly individual, whereby each person is best suited and will flourish in a job that best suits her or him. The chapter examines work quality with a focus on the factors of a work environment, finding that happiness with a job is based on feeling that on well-paid, work-life balance, autonomy, variety, job security, opportunities for advancement and promotion, social capital (seeing one’s boss as a partner or collaborator instead of an authoritarian entity or “the boss”), healthy and safe workplace; and unhappiness is based on factors including where one works, whether one combines work activities with other activities, and whether one works alone or in the company of others.

Chapter 7, Restoring American Happiness is written by Jeffrey Sachs. This chapter analyzes the historical happiness of the United States, based upon the Cantril ladder as a measure for life satisfaction and the six variables contemplated in World Happiness Reports. Data is analyzed to demonstrate that a “growth-only agenda is doubly wrong headed” citing the national government's agenda to use economic growth to heal the deepening divide amongst Americans. Data is used to demonstrates that in the United States, while income and healthy life expectancy are increasing, social support (having someone to count on in times of need), a sense of personal freedom to make decisions, generosity (giving donations), and trust in government and business (perception of corruption) are getting worse, and that the data demonstrates it is more efficient and effective to invest in social capital to increase people’s happiness and well-being than increasing GDP. It identifies five trends contributing to the decline of social capital in the U.S.: (1) corporate campaign financing (“the rise of mega-dollars in U.S. politics”) due to the Citizens United decision, (2) income inequality (“soaring income and wealth inequality” exacerbated by “big money in politics”), (3) decline in social trust, related to immigration surge and economic and ethnic segregation, (4) Post 9/11 reaction to stoke fear rather and “us vs. them” dualism among Amerind and between nations, engaging in wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Yemen and other nations, misleading of citizens about international government activities, lowering the burden for officers to conduct frisking searches, and conducting other activities in the name of homeland security, and (5) the deterioration of the education system and decline in youth gaining a college education, in part due to the putting the market in charge of higher education costs and rolling back student financial aid. The chapter suggests reforms of (1) campaign finance reform including correction of the U.S. Supreme Court Citizens United decision, (2) policies to reduce income and wealth inequality including social safety nets, wealth taxes, public financing of health and education, (3) multi-culturalism through improved social relations between citizens born in the U.S. and immigrant populations, (4) improve access, quality and attainment of education.

2016 World Happiness Report (Update)[编辑]

Descriptions

The 2016 World Happiness Report -Rome Addition was issued in two parts as an update. Part one had four chapters: (1) Setting the Stage, (2) The Distribution of World Happiness, (3) Promoting Secular Ethics, and (4) Happiness and Sustainable Development: Concepts and Evidence. Part two has six chapters: (1) Inside the Life Satisfaction Blackbox, (2) Human Flourishing, the Common Good, and Catholic Social Teaching, (3) The Challenges of Public Happiness: An Historical-Methodological Reconstruction, (4) The Geography of Parenthood and Well-Being: Do Children Make Us Happy, Where and Why?, and (5) Multidimensional Well-Being in Contemporary Europe: An Analysis of the Use of a Self-Organizing Map Applied to Share Data.

Chapter 1, Setting the Stage is written by John F. Helliwell, Richard Layard, and Jeffrey Sachs. This chapter briefly surveys the happiness movement (“Increasingly, happiness is considered to be the proper measure of social progress and the goal of public policy.”) gives an overview of the 2016 reports and synopsis of both parts of the 2016 Update Rome Addition.

Chapter 2, The Distribution of World Happiness is written by John F. Helliwell, Hailing Huang, and Shun Wang. This chapter reports happiness levels of countries and proposes the use of inequalities of happiness among individuals as a better measure for inequality than income inequality, and that all people in a population fare better in terms of happiness when there is less inequality in happiness in their region. It includes data from the World Health Organization and World Development Indicators, as well as Gallup World Poll. It debunks the notion that people rapidly adapt to changes in life circumstances and quickly return to an initial life satisfaction baseline, finding instead that changes in life circumstances such as government policies, major life events (unemployment, major disability) and immigration change people’s baseline life satisfaction levels. This chapter also addresses the measure for affect (feelings), finding that positive affect (happiness, laughter, enjoyment) has much “large and highly significant impact” on life satisfaction than negative affect (worry, sadness, anger). The chapter also examines differences in happiness levels explained by the factors of (1) social support, (2) income, (3) healthy life, (4) trust in government and business, (5) perceived freedom to make life decisions and (6) generosity.

Chapter 3, Promoting Secular Ethics is written by Richard Layard, This chapter argues for a revival of an ethical life and world, harkening to times when religious organizations were a dominant force. It calls on secular non-profit organizations to promote “ethical living in a way that provides inspiration, uplift, joy and mutual respect”, and gives examples of implementation by a non-profit founded by Richard Layard,[29] the chapter author, Action for Happiness, which offers online information from positive psychology and Buddhist teachings.

Chapter 4, Happiness and Sustainable Development: Concepts and Evidence is written by Jeffrey Sachs. This chapter identifies ways that sustainable development indicators (economic, social and environmental factors) can be used to explain variations in happiness. It concludes with a report about an appeal to include subjective well-being indicators into the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Part Two 2016 Special Rome Edition was edited by Jeffrey Sacks, Leonardo Becchetti and Anthony Arnett.

Chapter 1, Inside the Life Satisfaction Blackbox is written by Leonardo Becchetti, Luisa Carrado,[30] and Paolo Sama. This chapter proposes using quality of life measurements (a broader range of variables that life evaluation) in lieu of or in addition to overall life evaluations in future World Happiness Reports.

Chapter 2, Human Flourishing, the Common Good, and Catholic Social Teaching is written by Anthony Annett. This chapter contains explanations for three theories: (1) It is human nature to broadly define happiness and understand the connection between happiness and the common good, (2) that the current understanding of individuality is stripped of ties to the common good, and (3) that there is a need to restore the common good as central value for society. The chapter also proposes Catholic school teachings as a model for restoring the common good as a dominant value.

Chapter 3, The Challenges of Public Happiness: An Historical-Methodological Reconstruction is written by Luigino Bruni and Stefano Zemagni. This chapter contemplates Aristotelian concepts of happiness and virtue as they pertain to and support the findings in the World Happiness Reports regarding the impact of social support, trust in government, and equality of happiness.

Chapter 4, The Geography of Parenthood and Well-Being. Do Children Make Us Happy, Where and Why? is written by Luca Stanca.[31] This chapter examines other research findings that children do not add happiness to parents. Using data from the World Values Survey, it finds that, with the exception of widowed parents, having children has a negative effect on life satisfaction for parents in 2/3 of the 105 countries studied, with parents in richer countries suffering more. Once parents are old, life satisfaction increases. The chapter concludes that “existing evidence is not conclusive” and a statement that the causes for the low life satisfaction levels may be that for richer countries, having children is valued less, and in poorer countries, people suffer in financial and time costs when they have children.

Chapter 5, Multidimensional Well-Being in Contemporary Europe: Analysis of the Use of Self-Organizing Map Allied to SHARE Data is written by Mario Lucchini, Luca Crivelli [32] and Sara della Bella. This chapter contains a study of well-being data from older European adults. It finds that this chapter’s study results were consistent with the World Happiness Report 2016 update: positive affect (feelings) have a stronger impact on a person’s satisfaction with life than do negative affect (feelings).

2015 World Happiness Report[编辑]

Descriptions

The 2015 World Happiness Report has eight chapters: (1) Setting the Stage, (2) The Geography of World Happiness, (3) How Does Subjective Well-being Vary Around the World by Gender and Age?, (4) How to Make Policy When Happiness is the Goal, (5) Neuroscience of Happiness, (6) Healthy Young Minds Transforming the Mental Health of Children, (7) Human Values, Civil Economy, and Subjective Well-being, and (8) Investing in Social Capital.

Chapter 1, Setting the Stage is written by John F. Helliwell, Richard Layard and Jeffrey Sachs. This chapter celebrates the success of the happiness movement (“Happiness is increasingly considered a proper means of social progress and public policy.”), citing the OECD Guidelines on Measuring Subjective Well-being, a referendum in the EU requiring member nations to measure happiness, and the success of the World Happiness reports (with readership at about 1.5 million), and the adoption of happiness by the government of the United Arab Emirates, and other areas. It sets an aspiration of the inclusion of subjective well-being into the 2015 Sustainable Development Goals (not fulfilled), and outlines the 2015 report. It also address the use of the term Happiness, identifying the cons (narrowness of the term, breath of the term, flakiness), and defining the use of the term for the reasons that the 2011 UN General Assembly Resolution 65/309 Happiness Towards A Holistic Approach to Development[33] and April 2012 UN High Level Meeting: Well-being and Happiness: Defining a New Economic Paradigm,[34] Bhutan’s Gross National Happiness [35] philosophy, the term’s “convening and attention attracting power,” and the asset in a “double usage of happiness” as an emotional report and life evaluation.

Chapter 2, The Geography of Happiness is written by John F. Helliwell, Hailing Huang and Shun Wang. This chapter reports the happiness of nations measured by life evaluations. It includes color coded maps and an analysis of six factors the account for the differences: (1) social support in terms of someone to count on in times of need, (2) GDP per capita (income), (3) live expectancy (in terms of healthy years), (4) sense of corruption in government and business (trust), (5) perceived freedom to make life decisions, and (6) generosity. The first three factors were found to have the biggest impact on a population’s happiness. Crisis (natural disasters and economic crisis) the quality of governance, and social support were found to be the key drivers for changes in national happiness levels, with the happiness of nations undergoing a crisis in which people have a strong sense of social support falling less than nations where people do not have a strong sense of social support.

Chapter 3, How Does Subjective Well-being Vary Around the Globe by Gender and Age? is written by Nicole Fortin, John F. Helliwell and Shun Wang. This chapter uses data for 12 experiences: happiness (the emotion), smiling or laughing, enjoyment, feeling safe at night, feeling well rested, and feeling interested, as well as anger, worry, sadness, depression, stress and pain to examine differences by gender and age. Findings reported include that there is not a lot of difference in life evaluations between men and women across nations or within ages in a nation (women have slightly higher life evaluations than men: 0.09 on a ten-point scale). It reports that overall happiness falls into a U shape with age on the x axis and happiness on the y, with the low point being middle age (45-50) for most nations (in some happiness does not go up much in later life, so the shape is more of a downhill slide), and that the U shape holds for feeling well rested in all regions. If finds that that men generally feel safer at night than women but, when comparing countries, people in Latin America have the lowest sense of safety at night, while people in East Asia and Western Europe have the highest sense of safety at night. It also finds that as women age their sense of happiness declines and stress increases but worry decreases, as all people age their laughter, enjoyment and finding something of interest also declines, that anger is felt everywhere almost equally by men and women, stress peaks in the Middle Ages, and women experience depression more than men. It finds that where older people are happier, there is a sense of social support, freedom to make life choices and generosity (and income does not factor in as heavily as these three factors).

Chapter 4, How to Make Policy When Happiness is the Goal is written by Richard Layard and Gus O’Donnell. This chapter advocates for a “new form of cost-benefit analysis” for government expenditures in which a “critical level of extra happiness” yielded by a project is established. It contemplates the prioritization of increasing happiness of the happy vs. reducing misery of the miserable, as well as the issues of discount rate (weight) for the happiness of future generations. It includes a technical annex with equations for calculating the maximization for happiness in public expenditure, tax policy, regulations, the distribution of happiness and a discount rate.

Chapter 5, Neuroscience of Happiness is written by Richard J. Dawson and Brianna S. Schuyler. This chapter reports on research in brain science and happiness, identifying four aspects that account for happiness: (1) sustained positive emotion, (2) recovery of negative emotion (resilience), (3) empathy, altruism and pro-social behavior, and (4) mindfulness (mind-wandering/affective sickness). It concludes that the brain’s elasticity indicates that one can change one’s sense of happiness and life satisfaction (separate but overlapping positive consequences) levels by experiencing and practicing mindfulness, kindness, and generosity; and calls for more research on these topics.

Chapter 6, Healthy Young Minds: Transforming the Mental Health of Children is written by Richard Layard and Ann Hagell.[36] This chapter identifies emotional development as of primary importance, (compared to academic and behavioral factors) in a child’s development and determination of whether a child will be a happy and well-functioning adult. It then focuses on the issue of mental illness in children, citing the statistic that while worldwide 10% of the world's children (approximately 200 million) suffer from diagnosable mental health problems, even in the richest nations, only one quarter of these children of them are in treatment. It identifies the action steps to treating children with mental health problems: local community-lead child well-being programs, training health care professions to identify mental health problems in children, parity of esteem for mental and physical problems and treatment, access to evidence-based mental health treatment for families and children, promotion of well-being in schools with well-being codes that inform the organizational behavior of schools, training teachers to identify mental health in children, teachings of life skills, measuring of children’s well-being by schools, development of free apps available internationally to treat mental illness in teens, and inclusion of mental health with the goal of physical health in the Sustainable Development goals. The chapter lists the benefits of treating children’s mental health: improved educational performance, reduction in youth crimes, improved earnings and employment in adulthood, and better parenting of the next generation.

Chapter 7, Human Values, Civil Economy and Subjective Well-being is written by Leonardo Bechhetti,[37] Luigino Bruni and Stefano Zamagni. This chapter begins with a critique of the field of economics ("Economics today looks like physics before the discovery of electrons"), identifying reductionism in which humans are conceived of as 100% self-interested individuals (economic reductionism), profit maximization is prioritized over all other interests (corporate reductionism), and societal values are narrowly identified with GDP and ignore environmental, cultural, spiritual and relational aspects (value reductionism). The chapter them focuses on a theoretical approach termed "Civil Economy paradigm", and research about it demonstrating that going beyond reductionism leads to greater socialization for people and communities, and a rise in priority of the values of reciprocity, friendship, trustworthiness, and benevolence. It makes the argument that positive social relationships (trust, benevolence, shared social identities) yield happiness and positive economic outcomes. It ends with recommendations for move from the dominant model of elite-competitive democracy to a participatory/deliberative model of democracy with bottom-up political and economic participation and incentives for non-selfish actions (altruistic people) and corporations with wider goals than pure profit (ethical and environmentally responsible corporations).

Chapter 8, Investing in Social Capital is written by Jeffrey Sachs. This chapter focuses on “pro-sociality” (“individuals making decisions for the common good that may conflict with short-run egoistic incentives”). It identifies pro-social behaviors: honesty, benevolence, cooperation and trustworthiness. It recommends investment in social capital through education, moral instruction, professional codes of conduct, public censure and condemnation of violators of public trust, and public policies to narrow income inequalities for countries where there is generalized distrust of government and business, pervasive corruption and lawless behavior (such as tax evasion).

2013 World Happiness Report[编辑]

Descriptions

The 2013 World Happiness Report has eight chapters: (1) Introduction, (2) World Happiness: Trends, Explanations and Distribution, (3) Mental Illness and Unhappiness, (4) The Objective Benefits of Subjective Well-being, (5) Restoring Virtue Ethics in the Quest for Happiness, (6) Using Well-being as a Guide to Policy, (7) The OECD Approach to Measuring Subjective Well-being, and (8) From Capabilities to Contentment: Testing the Links between Human Development and Life Satisfaction.

Chapter 1, Introduction is written by John F. Helliwell, Richard Layard and Jeffrey Sachs. It synopsizes the chapters and gives a discussion of the term happiness.

Chapter 2, World Happiness: Trends, Explanations and Distributions is written by John F. Helliwell and Shun Wang. It provides ratings among countries and regions for satisfaction with life using the Cantril Ladder, positive and negative affect (emotions), and log of GDP per capita, years of healthy life expectancy, having someone to count on in times of trouble, perceptions of corruption, prevalence of generosity, and freedom to make life choices.

Chapter 3, Mental Illness and Unhappiness is written by Richard Layard, Dan Chisholm, Vikram Patel, and Shekhar Saxel. It identifies the far ranging prevalence of mental illness around the world (10% of the world's population at one time) and provides the evidence showing that "mental illness is a highly influential - and...the single biggest - determinant of misery." It concludes with examples of interventions implemented by countries around the world.

Chapter 4, The Objective Benefits of Subjective Well-being is written by Jan-Emmanuel de Neve, Ed Diener, Louis Tay and Cody Xuereb. It provides an explanation of the benefits of subjective well-being (happiness) on health & longevity, income, productivity & organizational behavior, and individual & social behavior. It touches on the role of happiness in human evolution through rewarding behaviors that increase evolutionary success and beneficial to survival.

Chapter 5, Restoring Virtue Ethics in the Quest for Happiness is written by Jeffrey Sachs. It argues that "a renewed focus on the role of ethics, and in particular of virtuous behavior, in happiness could lead us to new and effective strategies for raising individual, national and global well-being," looking to the eightfold noble path (the teachings of the dharma handed down in the Buddhist tradition that encompass wise view/understanding, wise intention, wise speech, wise action, wise livelihood, and effort, concentration and mindfulness), Aristotelian philosophy (people are social animals, "with individual happiness secured only within a political community...[which] should organize its institutions to promote virtuous behavior), and Christian doctrine of St. Thomas Aquinas ("placing happiness in the context of servicing God's will"). It gives an explanation of the evolution of the field of economics up t the "failures of hyper-commercialism" and suggests an antidote based on four global ethical values: (1) non-violence and respect for life, (2) justice and solidarity, (3) honesty and tolerance, and (4) mutual esteem and partnership.

Chapter 6, Using Well-being as Guide to Public Policy is written by Gus O'Donnell. This chapter gives a status report on the issues governments grapple with in adopting well-being and happiness measures and goals for policy, from understanding the data or establishing whether a specific policy improves well-being, to figuring out how to "incorporate well-being into standard policy making." It provides examples of efforts to measure happiness and well-being from Bhutan, New Zealand, South Africa, the UK, and cities and communities in the USA, Canada, Australia and Tasmania. It identifies the key policy areas of health, transport and education for policy makers to focus on and includes discussions about interpersonal comparability (concentrating on "getting people out of misery" instead of making happy people happier), discount rate (do we invest more in happiness for people today or in the future?) and putting a monetary value on happiness for policy trade off decisions (e.g. If "a 10% reduction in noise increase SWB by one unit, then we can infer that a 10% reduction is "worth" $1,000" when $1,000 would increase a person's SWB by one unit).

Chapter 7, The OECD Approach to Measuring Subjective Well-being is written by Martine Durand and Conal Smith. This chapter was written the same year the OECD issued its Guidelines on Measuring Subjective Well-being,[38] and is a synopsis of such. It includes a definition for subjective well-being: life evaluation (a person's reflection on their life and life circumstances), affect (positive and negative emotions) and eudaimonia; core measures, a discussion on data collection processes, survey and sample design, other aspects of using subjective well-being metrics, and ideas on how policy-makers can use subjective well-being data. It surveys the status of wealthy countries subjective well-being data collection process, and identifies future directions of experimentation and better income measures, citing the Easterlin Paradox as the basis for this call.

Chapter 8, From Capabilities to Contentment: Testing the Links between Human Development and Life Satisfaction is written by Jon Hall.[39] This chapter explains the components of human development using objective metrics: (1) education, health and command over income and nutrition resources, (2) participation and freedom, (3) human security, (4) equity, and (5) sustainability; key findings of the Human Development Index (HDI) ("weak relationship between economic growth and changes in health and education" as well as life expectancy), and examines the relationship between the HDI and happiness, finding that (1) components of the HDI "correlate strongly with better life evaluations," and (2) there is a strong relationship between life evaluation and the "non-income HDI." It contemplates measurement of conditions of life beyond the HDI that are important to well-being: (1) better working conditions, (2) security against crime and physical violence, (3) participation in economic and political activities, (4) freedom and (5) inequality. The concludes with the statements that the HDI and SWB have similar approaches and importantly connected, with the two disciplines offering alternative and complementary views of development.

2012 World Happiness Report[编辑]

Descriptions

The 2012 World Happiness Report was issued at the UN High Level Meeting Well-being and Happiness: Defining a New Economic Paradigm[40] by editors John F. Helliwell, Richard Layard and Jeffrey Sachs. Part one has an introduction (chapter 1) and three chapters: (2) the State of World Happiness, (3) Causes of Happiness and Misery, Some Policy Implications. Part two has three chapters, each a case study, of Bhutan, the United Kingdom Office of National Statistics, and the OECD.

Chapter 1, The Introduction is by Jeffrey Sachs and references Buddha and Aristotle, identifies today's era as the anthropocene, and identifies the reasons GDP is not a sufficient measure to guide governments and society.

Chapter 2, The State of World Happiness, is written by John F. Helliwell and Shun Wang,[41] and contains a discussion of subjective well-being measures that ranges from the validity of subjective well-being measures to the seriousness of happiness, happiness set points and cultural comparisons, and it includes data from the Gallup World Poll, European Social Survey, and the World Values Survey.[42]

Chapter 3, The Causes of Happiness and Misery is written by Richard Layard, Andrew Clark,[43] and Claudia Senik,[44] and contemplates research on the impact on happiness of the external factors of income, work, community and governance, values and religion, as well as the internal factors of mental health, physical health, family experience, education, and gender and age.

Chapter 4, Some Policy Implications, written by John F. Helliwell, Richard Layard and Jeffrey Sachs, calls for a greater understanding on how governments can measure happiness, the determinants of happiness, and use of happiness data and findings about determinants for policy purposes. It also highlights the role of GDP ("GDP is important but not all that is important") as a guide to policy makers, the importance that policy makers should place on providing opportunities for employment; the role of happiness in policy making ("Making happiness an objective of governments would not therefore lead to the “servile society,” and indeed quite the contrary...Happiness comes from an opportunity to mold one’s own future, and thus depends on a robust level of freedom."); the role of values and religion ("In well-functioning societies there is widespread support for the universal value that we should treat others as we would like them to treat us. We need to cultivate social norms so that the rich and powerful are never given a feeling of impunity vis-à-vis the rest of society."); calls for wider access to psychological therapies in a section on mental health citing the fact that one third of all families are affected by mental illness; identifies improvements in physical health as "probably the single most important factor that has improved human happiness" and calls out the rich-poor gap in health care between rich and poor countries; calls on workplace and governmental policies that encourage work-life balance and reduce stress, including family support and child care; and states that "Universal access to education is widely judged to be a basic human right..." The chapter concludes with a philosophical discussion.

Chapter 5, Case Study: Bhutan Gross National Happiness and the GNH Index is written by Karma Ura,[45] Sabine Alkire,[46] and Tsoki Zangmo. It gives a short history of the development of the Gross National Happiness (GNH) concept in Bhutan, and an explanation of the GNH index, data collection and data analysis process, including the rating methodology to determine if an individual experiences happiness sufficiency levels, as well as the policy and lifestyle implications

Chapter 6, Case Study: ONS Measuring Subjective Well-being: The UK Office of National Statistics Experience is written by Stephen Hicks. It covers the basis for the creation of the Measuring National Well-being Programme[47] in the UK's Office of National Statistics[48] (ONS), and the development of their methodology for measuring well-being.

Chapter 5, Case Study OECD Guidelines on Measuring Subjective Well-being is an explanation about the process and rationale the OECD was undertaking to develop its Guidelines on Measuring Subjective Well-being,[49] which it issued in 2013.

International rankings[编辑]

Data is collected from people in over 150 countries. Each variable measured reveals a populated-weighted average score on a scale running from 0 to 10 that is tracked over time and compared against other countries. These variables currently include: real GDP per capita, social support, healthy life expectancy, freedom to make life choices, generosity, and perceptions of corruption. Each country is also compared against a hypothetical nation called Dystopia. Dystopia represents the lowest national averages for each key variable and is, along with residual error, used as a regression benchmark.

2018 report[编辑]

As per the 2018 Happiness Index, Finland is the happiest country in the world. Norway, Denmark, Iceland and Switzerland hold the next top positions. The report was published on 14 March 2018 by UN. The full report can be read at 2018 Report. The World Happiness Report is a landmark survey of the state of global happiness. The World Happiness Report 2018, which ranks 156 countries by their happiness levels, and 117 countries by the happiness of their immigrants, was released on March 14th at a launch event at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences in the Vatican.

2017 report[编辑]

The 2017 report features the happiness score averaged over the years 2014-2016. For that timespan, Norway was the overall happiest country in the world, even though oil prices had dropped. Close behind were Denmark, Iceland and Switzerland in a tight pack. Four of the top five countries follow the Nordic model. All the top ten countries had high scores in the six categories. The ranked follow-on countries in the top ten are: Finland, the Netherlands, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and Sweden.

Table of data for 2017.[50]

Overall Rank Change in rank Country Score Change in score GDP per capita Social support Healthy life expectancy Freedom to make life choices Generosity Trust Residual
1 3  挪威 7.537 0.039 1.616 1.534 0.797 0.635 0.362 0.316 2.277
2 -1  丹麥 7.522 -0.004 1.482 1.551 0.793 0.626 0.355 0.401 2.314
3 0  冰島 7.504 0.003 1.481 1.611 0.834 0.627 0.476 0.154 2.323
4 -2  瑞士 7.494 -0.015 1.565 1.517 0.858 0.620 0.291 0.367 2.277
5 0  芬兰 7.469 0.056 1.444 1.540 0.809 0.618 0.245 0.383 2.430
6 1  荷蘭 7.377 0.038 1.504 1.429 0.811 0.585 0.470 0.283 2.295
7 -1  加拿大 7.316 -0.088 1.479 1.481 0.835 0.611 0.436 0.287 2.187
8 0  新西蘭 7.314 -0.020 1.406 1.548 0.817 0.614 0.500 0.383 2.046
9 0  澳大利亞 7.284 -0.029 1.484 1.510 0.844 0.602 0.478 0.301 2.065
10 0  瑞典 7.284 -0.007 1.494 1.478 0.831 0.613 0.385 0.384 2.098
11 0  以色列 7.213 -0.054 1.375 1.376 0.838 0.406 0.330 0.085 2.802
12 2  哥斯达黎加 7.079 -0.008 1.110 1.416 0.760 0.580 0.215 0.100 2.899
13 -1  奥地利 7.006 -0.113 1.487 1.460 0.815 0.568 0.316 0.221 2.139
14 -1  美國 6.993 -0.111 1.546 1.420 0.774 0.506 0.393 0.136 2.218
15 4  愛爾蘭 6.977 0.070 1.536 1.558 0.810 0.573 0.428 0.298 1.774
16 0  德國 6.951 -0.043 1.488 1.473 0.799 0.563 0.336 0.277 2.016
17 1  比利時 6.891 -0.038 1.464 1.462 0.818 0.540 0.232 0.251 2.124
18 2  盧森堡 6.863 -0.008 1.742 1.458 0.845 0.597 0.283 0.319 1.620
19 4  英国 6.714 -0.011 1.442 1.496 0.805 0.508 0.493 0.265 1.704
20 4  智利 6.652 -0.053 1.253 1.284 0.819 0.377 0.327 0.082 2.510
21 7  阿联酋 6.648 0.075 1.626 1.266 0.727 0.608 0.361 0.324 1.735
22 -5  巴西 6.635 -0.317 1.107 1.431 0.617 0.437 0.162 0.111 2.769
23 4  捷克 6.609 0.013 1.353 1.434 0.754 0.491 0.088 0.037 2.452
24 2  阿根廷 6.599 -0.051 1.185 1.440 0.695 0.495 0.109 0.060 2.614
25 -4  墨西哥 6.578 -0.200 1.153 1.211 0.710 0.413 0.121 0.133 2.837
26 -4  新加坡 6.572 -0.167 1.692 1.354 0.949 0.550 0.346 0.464 1.216
27 3  馬爾他 6.527 0.039 1.343 1.488 0.822 0.589 0.575 0.153 1.557
28 1  乌拉圭 6.454 -0.091 1.218 1.412 0.719 0.579 0.175 0.178 2.172
29 10  危地马拉 6.454 0.130 0.872 1.256 0.540 0.531 0.283 0.077 2.894
30 -5  巴拿马 6.452 -0.249 1.234 1.373 0.706 0.550 0.211 0.071 2.307
31 1  法國 6.442 -0.036 1.431 1.388 0.844 0.470 0.130 0.173 2.006
32 1  泰國 6.424 -0.050 1.128 1.426 0.647 0.580 0.572 0.032 2.040
33 2  臺灣 6.422 0.043 1.434 1.385 0.794 0.361 0.258 0.064 2.127
34 3  西班牙 6.403 0.042 1.384 1.532 0.889 0.409 0.190 0.071 1.928
35 1  卡塔尔 6.375 0.000 1.871 1.274 0.710 0.604 0.330 0.439 1.145
36 -5  哥伦比亚 6.357 -0.124 1.071 1.402 0.595 0.477 0.149 0.047 2.616
37 -3  沙烏地阿拉伯 6.344 -0.035 1.531 1.287 0.590 0.450 0.148 0.273 2.065
38 5  千里達及托巴哥 6.168 0.000 1.361 1.380 0.520 0.519 0.325 0.009 2.053
39 2  科威特 6.105 -0.134 1.633 1.260 0.632 0.496 0.228 0.215 1.640
40 5  斯洛伐克 6.098 0.020 1.325 1.505 0.713 0.296 0.137 0.024 2.098
41 1  巴林 6.087 -0.131 1.488 1.323 0.653 0.537 0.173 0.257 1.656
42 5  马来西亚 6.084 0.079 1.291 1.285 0.619 0.402 0.417 0.066 2.004
 歐洲[Note 1] 6.080 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
43 5  尼加拉瓜 6.071 0.079 0.737 1.287 0.653 0.448 0.302 0.131 2.514
44 7  厄瓜多尔 6.008 0.032 1.001 1.286 0.686 0.455 0.150 0.140 2.290
45 1  薩爾瓦多 6.003 -0.065 0.910 1.182 0.596 0.432 0.078 0.090 2.715
46 11  波蘭 5.973 0.138 1.292 1.446 0.699 0.520 0.158 0.059 1.798
47 2  乌兹别克斯坦 5.971 -0.016 0.786 1.549 0.498 0.658 0.416 0.247 1.817
48 2  義大利 5.964 -0.013 1.395 1.445 0.853 0.256 0.173 0.028 1.813
49 7  俄羅斯 5.963 0.107 1.282 1.469 0.547 0.374 0.052 0.033 2.206
50 2  伯利兹 5.956 0.000 0.908 1.081 0.450 0.548 0.240 0.097 2.632
51 2  日本 5.920 -0.001 1.417 1.436 0.913 0.506 0.121 0.164 1.363
52 8  立陶宛 5.902 0.089 1.315 1.474 0.629 0.234 0.010 0.012 2.228
53 -15  阿尔及利亚 5.872 -0.483 1.092 1.146 0.618 0.233 0.069 0.146 2.568
54 14  拉脫維亞 5.850 0.290 1.261 1.405 0.639 0.326 0.153 0.074 1.994
55 0  摩尔多瓦 5.838 -0.059 0.729 1.252 0.589 0.241 0.209 0.010 2.808
56 2  韩国 5.838 0.003 1.402 1.128 0.900 0.258 0.207 0.063 1.880
57 14  羅馬尼亞 5.825 0.297 1.218 1.150 0.685 0.457 0.134 0.004 2.177
58 1  玻利维亚 5.823 0.001 0.834 1.228 0.474 0.559 0.226 0.060 2.443
59 6  土库曼斯坦 5.822 0.164 1.131 1.493 0.438 0.418 0.250 0.259 1.833
60 -6  哈萨克斯坦 5.819 -0.100 1.285 1.384 0.606 0.437 0.202 0.119 1.785
61 1 Template:Country data North Cyprus 5.810 0.039 1.347 1.186 0.835 0.471 0.267 0.155 1.549
62 1  斯洛維尼亞 5.758 -0.010 1.341 1.453 0.791 0.573 0.243 0.045 1.313
63 1  秘魯 5.715 -0.028 1.035 1.219 0.630 0.450 0.127 0.047 2.207
64 2  模里西斯 5.629 -0.019 1.189 1.210 0.638 0.491 0.361 0.042 1.698
65 4  賽普勒斯 5.621 0.075 1.356 1.131 0.845 0.355 0.271 0.041 1.621
66 6  爱沙尼亚 5.611 0.094 1.321 1.477 0.695 0.479 0.099 0.183 1.358
67 -6  白俄羅斯 5.569 -0.233 1.157 1.445 0.638 0.295 0.155 0.156 1.723
68 -1  利比亞 5.525 -0.090 1.102 1.358 0.520 0.466 0.152 0.093 1.835
69 9  土耳其 5.500 0.111 1.198 1.338 0.638 0.301 0.047 0.100 1.879
70 0  巴拉圭 5.493 -0.045 0.933 1.507 0.579 0.474 0.224 0.091 1.685
71 4  香港 5.472 0.014 1.552 1.263 0.943 0.491 0.374 0.294 0.555
72 10  菲律賓 5.430 0.151 0.858 1.254 0.468 0.585 0.194 0.099 1.973
73 13  塞爾維亞 5.395 0.218 1.069 1.258 0.651 0.209 0.220 0.041 1.947
74 6  约旦 5.336 0.033 0.991 1.239 0.605 0.418 0.172 0.120 1.791
75 16  匈牙利 5.324 0.179 1.286 1.343 0.688 0.176 0.078 0.037 1.716
76 -3  牙买加 5.311 -0.199 0.926 1.368 0.641 0.474 0.234 0.055 1.612
World 5.305[Note 2] N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
77 -3  克罗地亚 5.293 -0.195 1.223 0.968 0.701 0.256 0.248 0.043 1.854
78 -1  科索沃 5.279 -0.122 0.951 1.138 0.541 0.260 0.320 0.057 2.011
79 4  中國 5.273 0.028 1.081 1.161 0.741 0.473 0.029 0.023 1.765
80 12  巴基斯坦 5.269 0.137 0.727 0.673 0.402 0.235 0.315 0.124 2.792
81 -2  印度尼西亞 5.262 -0.052 0.996 1.274 0.492 0.443 0.612 0.015 1.429
82 -38  委內瑞拉 5.250 -0.834 1.128 1.431 0.617 0.154 0.065 0.064 1.789
83 5  蒙特內哥羅 5.237 0.076 1.121 1.238 0.667 0.195 0.198 0.088 1.729
84 6  摩洛哥 5.235 0.084 0.878 0.775 0.598 0.408 0.032 0.088 2.456
85 -4  阿塞拜疆 7.342 -0.057 1.154 1.152 0.541 0.398 0.045 0.181 1.762
86 3  多米尼加 5.230 0.075 1.079 1.402 0.575 0.553 0.187 0.114 1.319
87 12  希臘 5.227 0.194 1.289 1.239 0.810 0.096 0.000 0.043 1.749
88 5  黎巴嫩 5.225 0.096 1.075 1.130 0.735 0.289 0.264 0.038 1.695
89 5  葡萄牙 5.195 0.072 1.315 1.367 0.796 0.498 0.095 0.016 1.108
90 -3  波黑 5.182 0.019 0.982 1.069 0.705 0.204 0.329 0.000 1.892
91 13  洪都拉斯 5.181 0.310 0.731 1.144 0.583 0.348 0.236 0.073 2.066
92 3  馬其頓 5.175 0.054 1.065 1.208 0.645 0.326 0.254 0.060 1.617
93 -17  索马里 5.151 -0.289 0.023 0.721 0.114 0.602 0.292 0.282 3.117
94 2  越南 5.074 0.013 0.789 1.277 0.652 0.571 0.235 0.088 1.462
95 8  奈及利亞 5.074 0.199 0.784 1.216 0.057 0.395 0.231 0.026 2.365
96 4  塔吉克斯坦 5.041 0.045 0.525 1.271 0.529 0.472 0.249 0.146 1.849
97 -13  不丹 5.011 -0.185 0.885 1.340 0.496 0.502 0.474 0.173 1.140
98 -13  吉尔吉斯斯坦 5.004 -0.181 0.596 1.394 0.553 0.455 0.429 0.039 1.537
99 8  尼泊尔 4.962 0.169 0.480 1.179 0.504 0.440 0.394 0.073 1.891
苏联 Soviet Union 4.959[Note 3] N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
100 1  蒙古 4.955 0.048 1.027 1.493 0.558 0.394 0.338 0.033 1.111
101 15  南非 4.829 0.370 1.055 1.385 0.187 0.479 0.139 0.073 1.511
102 -4  突尼西亞 4.805 -0.240 1.007 0.868 0.613 0.290 0.050 0.087 1.890
103 5 Template:Country data Palestinian Territories 4.775 0.021 0.716 1.156 0.566 0.255 0.114 0.089 1.879
104 16  埃及 4.735 0.373 0.990 0.997 0.520 0.282 0.129 0.114 1.702
105 24  保加利亚 4.714 0.497 1.161 1.434 0.708 0.289 0.113 0.011 0.996
106 5  塞拉利昂 4.709 0.074 0.368 0.984 0.006 0.319 0.293 0.071 2.668
107 7  喀麦隆 4.695 0.182 0.564 0.946 0.133 0.430 0.236 0.051 2.334
108 -3  伊朗 4.692 -0.121 1.157 0.712 0.639 0.249 0.387 0.049 1.499
109 0  阿尔巴尼亚 4.644 -0.011 0.996 0.804 0.731 0.381 0.201 0.040 1.490
110 0  孟加拉国 4.608 -0.035 0.587 0.735 0.533 0.478 0.172 0.124 1.979
111 2  纳米比亚 4.574 0.000 0.964 1.098 0.339 0.520 0.077 0.093 1.482
112 10  肯尼亚 4.553 0.197 0.560 1.068 0.310 0.453 0.445 0.065 1.652
113 NA  莫桑比克 4.550 NA 0.234 0.871 0.107 0.481 0.322 0.179 2.356
114 5  緬甸 4.545 0.150 0.367 1.123 0.398 0.514 0.838 0.189 1.115
115 13  塞内加尔 4.535 0.316 0.479 1.180 0.409 0.378 0.183 0.115 1.790
116 -10  尚比亞 4.514 -0.281 0.636 1.003 0.258 0.462 0.250 0.078 1.827
117 -5  伊拉克 4.497 -0.078 1.103 0.979 0.501 0.289 0.200 0.107 1.319
118 16  加彭 4.465 0.344 1.198 1.156 0.357 0.312 0.044 0.076 1.323
119 -4  衣索比亞 4.460 -0.048 0.339 0.865 0.353 0.409 0.313 0.165 2.016
120 -3  斯里蘭卡 4.440 0.025 1.010 1.260 0.625 0.561 0.491 0.074 0.419
121 0  亞美尼亞 4.376 0.016 0.901 1.007 0.638 0.198 0.083 0.027 1.521
122 -4  印度 4.315 -0.089 0.792 0.754 0.455 0.470 0.232 0.092 1.519
123 7  毛里塔尼亚 4.292 0.091 0.648 1.272 0.285 0.096 0.202 0.137 1.652
124 1 Template:Country data Congo (Brazzaville) 4.291 0.019 0.809 0.832 0.290 0.435 0.121 0.080 1.724
125 1  格鲁吉亚 4.286 0.034 0.951 0.571 0.650 0.309 0.054 0.252 1.500
126 1 Template:Country data Congo (Kinshasa) 4.280 0.044 0.092 1.229 0.191 0.236 0.246 0.060 2.225
127 8  马里 4.190 0.117 0.476 1.281 0.169 0.307 0.183 0.105 1.668
128 11  科特迪瓦 4.180 0.264 0.603 0.905 0.049 0.448 0.201 0.130 1.845
129 11  柬埔寨 4.168 0.261 0.602 1.006 0.430 0.633 0.386 0.068 1.043
130 3  苏丹 4.139 0.000 0.660 1.214 0.291 0.015 0.182 0.090 1.687
131 -7  加纳 4.120 -0.156 0.667 0.874 0.296 0.423 0.257 0.025 1.578
132 -9  烏克蘭 4.096 -0.228 0.895 1.395 0.576 0.123 0.270 0.023 0.814
133 13  乌干达 4.081 0.342 0.381 1.130 0.218 0.443 0.326 0.057 1.526
134 11  布吉納法索 4.032 0.293 0.350 1.043 0.216 0.324 0.251 0.120 1.727
135 7  尼日尔 4.028 0.172 0.162 0.993 0.269 0.364 0.229 0.139 1.874
136 -4  马拉维 3.970 -0.186 0.233 0.513 0.315 0.467 0.287 0.073 2.082
137 7  乍得 3.936 0.173 0.438 0.954 0.041 0.162 0.216 0.054 2.071
138 -7  辛巴威 3.875 -0.318 0.376 1.083 0.197 0.336 0.189 0.095 1.598
139 NA  賴索托 3.808 NA 0.521 1.190 0.000 0.391 0.157 0.119 1.430
140 1  安哥拉 3.795 -0.071 0.858 1.104 0.050 0.000 0.098 0.070 1.614
141 13  阿富汗 3.794 0.434 0.401 0.582 0.181 0.106 0.312 0.061 2.151
142 -5  博茨瓦纳 3.766 -0.208 1.122 1.222 0.342 0.505 0.099 0.099 0.378
143 10  贝宁 3.657 0.173 0.431 0.435 0.210 0.426 0.208 0.061 1.886
144 4  马达加斯加 3.644 -0.051 0.306 0.913 0.375 0.189 0.209 0.067 1.585
145 -9  海地 3.603 -0.425 0.369 0.640 0.277 0.030 0.489 0.100 1.697
146 1  葉門 3.593 -0.131 0.592 0.935 0.310 0.249 0.104 0.057 1.346
147 -4  南蘇丹 3.591 -0.241 0.397 0.601 0.163 0.147 0.286 0.117 1.880
148 2  利比里亚 3.533 -0.089 0.119 0.872 0.230 0.333 0.267 0.039 1.673
149 2  几内亚 3.507 -0.100 0.245 0.791 0.194 0.349 0.265 0.111 1.552
150 5  多哥 3.495 0.192 0.305 0.432 0.247 0.380 0.197 0.096 1.837
151 1  卢旺达 3.471 -0.044 0.369 0.946 0.326 0.582 0.253 0.455 0.540
152 4  叙利亚 3.462 0.393 0.777 0.396 0.501 0.082 0.494 0.151 1.062
153 -4  坦桑尼亚 3.349 -0.317 0.511 1.042 0.365 0.390 0.354 0.066 0.621
154 3  布隆迪 2.905 0.000 0.092 0.630 0.152 0.060 0.204 0.084 1.683
155 NA  中非 2.693 NA 0.000 0.000 0.019 0.271 0.281 0.057 2.066

2013-2015 averaged ranking[51][编辑]

Table

Legend:

  Explained by: GDP per capita
  Explained by: Social support
  Explained by: Healthy life expectancy
  Explained by: Freedom to make life choices
  Explained by: Generosity
  Trust or absence of corruption, as explained by the publicly perceived absence of corruption in government and business[52]

Italics: States with limited recognition and disputed territories

Overall Rank
[53][54]
Country Score Change Over
Prior Year
GDP per capita Social support Healthy life expectancy Freedom to make life choices Generosity Trust
1  丹麥 7.526 -0.401
2  瑞士 7.509 0.035
3  冰島 7.501 0.000
4  挪威 7.498 0.082
5  芬兰 7.413 -0.259
6  加拿大 7.404 -0.041
7  荷蘭 7.339 -0.119
8  新西蘭 7.334 -0.097
9  澳大利亞 7.313 0.002
10  瑞典 7.291 -0.017
11  以色列 7.267 0.258
12  奥地利 7.119 -0.003
13  美國 7.104 -0.261
14  哥斯达黎加 7.087 -0.171
15  波多黎各 7.039 0.446
16  德國 6.994 0.486
17  巴西 6.952 0.474
18  比利時 6.929 -0.311
19  爱尔兰 6.907 -0.238
20  盧森堡 6.871 0.000
21  墨西哥 6.778 0.225
22  新加坡 6.739 0.099
23  英国 6.725 -0.161
24  智利 6.705 0.826
25  巴拿马 6.701 0.191
26  阿根廷 6.650 0.457
27  捷克 6.596 0.126
28  阿联酋 6.573 -0.161
29  乌拉圭 6.545 0.804
30  馬爾他 6.488 0.000
31  哥伦比亚 6.481 0.399
32  法國 6.478 -0.336
33  泰國 6.474 0.631
34  沙烏地阿拉伯 6.379 -0.794
35 臺灣 6.379 0.190
36  卡塔尔 6.375 0.000
37  西班牙 6.361 -0.711
38  阿尔及利亚 6.355 0.000
39  危地马拉 6.324 0.211
40  苏里南 6.269 0.000
41  科威特 6.239 0.164
42  巴林 6.218 0.000
43  千里達及托巴哥 6.168 0.336
44  委內瑞拉 6.084 -0.762
45  斯洛伐克 6.078 0.814
46  薩爾瓦多 6.068 0.572
47  马来西亚 6.005 -0.132
48  尼加拉瓜 5.992 1.285
49  乌兹别克斯坦 5.987 0.755
50  義大利 5.977 -0.735
51  厄瓜多尔 5.976 0.966
52  伯利兹 5.956 -0.495
53  日本 5.921 -0.446
54  哈萨克斯坦 5.919 0.322
55  摩尔多瓦 5.897 0.959
56  俄羅斯 5.856 0.738
57  波蘭 5.835 0.098
58  韩国 5.835 0.295
59  玻利维亚 5.822 0.322
60  立陶宛 5.813 -0.069
61  白俄羅斯 5.802 0.165
62  北賽普勒斯 5.771 0.000
63  斯洛維尼亞 5.768 -0.044
64  秘魯 5.743 0.730
65  土库曼斯坦 5.658 0.000
66  模里西斯 5.648 0.000
67  利比亞 5.615 0.000
68  拉脫維亞 5.560 0.872
69  賽普勒斯 5.546 -0.692
70  巴拉圭 5.538 0.536
71  羅馬尼亞 5.528 0.310
72  爱沙尼亚 5.517 0.165
73  牙买加 5.510 -0.698
74  克罗地亚 5.488 -0.333
75  香港 5.458 -0.053
76  索马里 5.440 0.000
77 科索沃 Kosovo [Note 4] 5.401 0.298
78  土耳其 5.389 0.216
79  印度尼西亞 5.314 0.295
80  约旦 5.303 -0.638
81  阿塞拜疆 5.291 0.642
82  菲律賓 5.279 0.425
83  中华人民共和国 5.245 0.525
84  不丹 5.196 0.000
85  吉尔吉斯斯坦 5.185 0.515
86  塞爾維亞 5.177 0.426
87  波黑 5.163 0.263
88  蒙特內哥羅 5.161 -0.035
89  多米尼加 5.155 0.070
90  摩洛哥 5.151 0.000
91  匈牙利 5.145 0.070
92  巴基斯坦 5.132 -0.374
93  黎巴嫩 5.129 0.059
94  葡萄牙 5.123 -0.282
95  北馬其頓 5.121 0.627
96  越南 5.061 -0.299
97 索马里兰 Somaliland region 5.057 0.000
98  突尼西亞 5.045 0.000
99  希臘 5.033 -1.294
100  塔吉克斯坦 4.996 0.474
101  蒙古 4.907 0.298
102  老挝 4.876 -0.344
103  奈及利亞 4.875 0.075
104  洪都拉斯 4.871 -0.375
105  伊朗 4.813 -0.507
106  尚比亞 4.795 0.381
107  尼泊尔 4.793 0.135
108 巴勒斯坦國 Palestinian Territories[Note 5] 4.754 0.321
109  阿尔巴尼亚 4.655 0.021
110  孟加拉国 4.643 0.170
111  塞拉利昂 4.635 1.028
112  伊拉克 4.575 0.000
113  纳米比亚 4.574 -0.312
114  喀麦隆 4.513 0.413
115  衣索比亞 4.508 0.000
116  南非 4.459 -0.686
117  斯里蘭卡 4.415 0.037
118  印度 4.404 -0.750
119  緬甸 4.395 0.000
120  埃及 4.362 -0.996
121  亞美尼亞 4.360 -0.226
122  肯尼亚 4.356 -0.044
123  烏克蘭 4.324 -0.701
124  加纳 4.276 -0.600
125  刚果共和国 4.272 0.000
126  格鲁吉亚 4.252 0.561
127  刚果民主共和国 4.236 0.000
128  塞内加尔 4.219 -0.328
129  保加利亚 4.217 0.373
130  毛里塔尼亚 4.201 0.052
131  辛巴威 4.193 0.639
132  马拉维 4.156 -0.205
133  苏丹 4.139 0.000
134  加彭 4.121 0.000
135  马里 4.073 0.059
136  海地 4.028 0.274
137  博茨瓦纳 3.974 -0.765
138  科摩罗 3.956 0.000
139  科特迪瓦 3.916 0.000
140  柬埔寨 3.907 0.045
141  安哥拉 3.866 0.000
142  尼日尔 3.856 -0.144
143  南蘇丹 3.832 0.000
144  乍得 3.763 -0.025
145  布吉納法索 3.739 -0.170
146  乌干达 3.739 -0.356
147  葉門 3.724 -0.754
148  马达加斯加 3.695 -0.285
149  坦桑尼亚 3.666 -0.460
150  利比里亚 3.622 -0.080
151  几内亚 3.607 0.000
152  卢旺达 3.515 -0.700
153  贝宁 3.484 0.154
154  阿富汗 3.360 0.000
155  多哥 3.303 0.100
156  叙利亚 3.069 0.000
157  布隆迪 2.905 0.000

2016 map [55][编辑]

Static version of the World Happiness Map

Criticism[编辑]

From an econometric perspective, some statisticians argue the statistical methodology mentioned in the first world happiness report using 9 domains is unreliable. [56]

Other argue that the Word Happiness Report model uses a limited subset of indicators used by other models and does not use an Index function like peer econometric models such as Gross National Well-being Index 2005, Sustainable Society Index of 2008 [57], OECD Better Life Index of 2011, and Bhutan Gross National Happiness Index of 2012, and Social Progress Index of 2013.

Other critics points out that Happiness Surveys are contradictory in Ranking because of the varying methodologies. They also argue that the surveys are inherently flawed. "No matter how carefully parsed the data may be, a survey based on unreliable answers isn't worth a lot." For instance, "A 2012 Gallup survey on happiest countries had a completely different list, with Panama first, followed by Paraguay, El Salvador, and Venezuela" They also cite a Pew survey of 43 countries in 2014 (which excluded most of Europe) had Mexico, Israel and Venezuela finishing first, second and third" [58]

Other point out that the ranking results is counter intuitive when it come to some dimensions, for "instance if rate of suicide is used as a metric for measuring unhappiness, (the opposite of happiness), then quite some of the countries which are ranked among the top 20 happiest countries in the world will also feature among the top 20 with the highest suicide rates in the world." [59]

From a philosophical perspective, critics argue that measuring of happiness of a grouping of people is misleading because happiness is an individual matter. They state "the Dalai Lama, Ghandi, Tolstoy and several others, happiness is an individual choice that is independent of the society, its structures and enabling or dis-enabling conditions and not something to be measured using variables that can only capture a nation’s well-being. This means therefore that one cannot really talk of a happy or unhappy nation, but of happy or unhappy individuals." [60]

See also[编辑]

Notes[编辑]

  1. ^ Score not included in the original report, but was attained by adding up Europe's scores and then dividing for an average: 6.08044.
  2. ^ Score not included in the original report, but was attained by adding up all the scores and then dividing for an average: 5.3053935483871.
  3. ^ Score not included in the original report, but just added up all the scores and divided for an average: 4.9592.
  4. ^ 科索沃是一個在科索沃共和國塞爾維亞共和國之間的爭議領土。科索沃已于2008年單方面宣布独立并成立了科索沃共和国,但塞尔维亚仍坚持认为科索沃是其主权领土的一個自治區联合国193个成员国中有113个已承认科索沃的独立地位。
  5. ^ See the following on statehood criteria:

References[编辑]

  1. ^ World Happiness Report homepage. 
  2. ^ Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, Associate Professor of Economics and Strategy. University of Oxford, SAID Business School. 
  3. ^ People Collection - Haifang Huang, Ph.D.. University of Alberta. 
  4. ^ Shun Wang, Assistant Professor at the School of Public Policy and Management, Korea Development Institute. VOX CEPR Policy Portal voxeu.org/. 
  5. ^ Martine Durand (PDF). OECD.org. 
  6. ^ Nicole Fortin Professor CIFAR, SIIWB program, Senior FellowIZA, Research Fellow. University of British Columbia School of Economics economics.ubc.ca. 
  7. ^ Jon Hall Head of Unit. UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME Human Development Programme. 
  8. ^ Valerie Møller. The Pursuit of Human Well-being miqols.org. 
  9. ^ Happiness : towards a holistic approach to development : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly. UN DAG Repository. 
  10. ^ Defining a New Economic Paradigm: The Report of the High-Level Meeting on Wellbeing and Happiness. UN Sustainable Development Knowledge Platform. 
  11. ^ GNH Survey 2010 (PDF). The Centre for Bhutan Studies. [17 October 2013]. 
  12. ^ Defining a New Economic Paradigm: The Report of the High-Level Meeting on Wellbeing and Happiness. Sustainable Development Knowledge Platform. 
  13. ^ Helliwell, John; Layard, Richard; Sachs, Jeffrey. World Happiness Report (PDF). Columbia University Earth Institute. April 2, 2012 [2014-06-29]. 
  14. ^ Kyu Lee. Sustainable Development Solutions Network | World Happiness Report 2013. unsdsn.org. 2013-09-09 [2014-04-25]. 
  15. ^ World Happiness Report. 
  16. ^ Astor, Maggie. Want to Be Happy? Try Moving to Finland. The New York Times. March 14, 2018 [March 14, 2018]. 
  17. ^ Pullella, Philip. Finland Is World's Happiest Country, U.S. Discontent Grows: U.N. Report. U.S. News & World Report. March 14, 2018 [March 14, 2018]. 
  18. ^ Methodology - How Does the Gallup World Poll Work?. www.gallup.com. 
  19. ^ World Poll Questions - Gallup (PDF). 
  20. ^ This is the world's happiest country. CNN Travel. 2018-03-14 [2018-03-14] (英语). 
  21. ^ Global Dialogue for Happiness: Towards a Happier Life. www.worldgovernmentsummit.org. February 11, 2017. 
  22. ^ Ernesto Illy Foundation supports the World Happiness Report 2017. www.comunicaffe.com. March 21, 2017. 
  23. ^ Fei Wang. 
  24. ^ Horizon Research Consultancy Group. Global Market Research www.agmr.com. 
  25. ^ Chinese General Social Survey (China GSS). Survey Research Center www.src.ust.hk. 
  26. ^ Habib Tiliouine University of Oran, Faculty of Social Sciences, Faculty Member, Islamic Studies. univ-oran.academia.edu/. 
  27. ^ Children's World: International Survey of Children's Well-being. 
  28. ^ Staff Biography - Prof Nattavudh POWDTHAVEE Associate - Wellbeing. The London School for Economics and Political Performance - Centre for Economic Performance. 
  29. ^ Why Happiness?. Action for Happiness. 
  30. ^ Faculty of Economics - Dr Luisa Corrado. University of Cambridge. 
  31. ^ Luca Stanca University of Milan , Milano · Department of Economics, Management and Quantitative Methods DEMM. Research Gate. 
  32. ^ Luca Crivelli - Biography. Università della Svizzera italiana. 
  33. ^ Happiness : towards a holistic approach to development : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly. 
  34. ^ Defining a New Economic Paradigm: The Report of the High-Level Meeting on Wellbeing and Happiness. 
  35. ^ 2015 GNH Survey Report. Center for Bhutan Studies. 
  36. ^ Dr. Ann Hagell. Nuffield Foundation. 
  37. ^ Leonardo Becchetti, Professore Ordinario. University of Rome "Tor Vergata". 
  38. ^ OECD Guidelines on Measuring Subjective Well-being. March 20, 2013. 
  39. ^ Jon Hall - Head of Unit United Nations Development Programme. 
  40. ^ Defining a New Economic Paradigm: The Report of the High-Level Meeting on Wellbeing and Happiness. 2012. 
  41. ^ Shun Wang -Assistant Professor at the School of Public Policy and Management, Korea Development Institute. voxeu.org/. 
  42. ^ Welcome to the World Values Survey site. 
  43. ^ Staff Biography Dr. Andrew Clark. Center for Economic Performance. 
  44. ^ Claudia Senik. Economics Serving Society. 
  45. ^ Karma Ura. Royal Institute for Governance and Strategic Studies. 
  46. ^ Sabina Alkire. Oxford Poverty & Human Development Initiative. 
  47. ^ Well-being. Office for National Statistics. 
  48. ^ Welcome to the Office for National Statistics. 
  49. ^ OECD. OECD Guidelines on Measuring Subjective Well-being. 
  50. ^ Helliwell, J.; Layard, R.; Sachs, J. World Happiness Report 2017. New York: Sustainable Development Solutions Network. 2017. ISBN 978-0-9968513-5-0. 
  51. ^ World Happiness Report 2016 Update. UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network; Earth Institute (University of Columbia): 20–21–22. [20 Mar 2016]. (原始内容存档于17 Mar 2016). 
  52. ^ Chapter 2: The Distribution of World Happiness, World Happiness Report 2016 Update (PDF), p. 4, para. 1, [20 Mar 2016] 
  53. ^ 2016 Update Report download (PDF). [20 Mar 2016]. 
  54. ^ 2016 Table download (XLS), Figure2.2, [20 Mar 2016] 
  55. ^ World Well-being Explorer. World Well-being Explorer. [5 December 2016]. 
  56. ^ https://flowingdata.com/2012/04/25/world-happiness-report-makes-statisticians-unhappy/
  57. ^ http://www.ssfindex.com/data-all-countries/
  58. ^ https://nypost.com/2017/03/22/that-world-happiness-survey-is-complete-crap/
  59. ^ https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/news/columns/can-happiness-really-be-measured/139302.html
  60. ^ https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/news/columns/can-happiness-really-be-measured/139302.html

External links[编辑]

Template:Quality of life country lists