NEW YORK (Reuters) - Despite economic
woes, wars, conflicts and natural disasters the world is a happier place
today than it was four years ago and Indonesians, Indians and Mexicans
seem to be the most contented people on the planet.
More than three-quarters of people around the globe who
were questioned in an international poll said they were happy with
their lives and nearly a quarter described themselves as very happy.
"The world is a happier place today and we can actually
measure it because we have been tracking it," said John Wright, senior
vice president of Ipsos Global, which has surveyed the happiness of more
than 18,000 people in 24 countries since 2007.
But he added that expectations of why people are happy should be carefully weighed.
"It is not just about the economy and their well being.
It is about a whole series of other factors that make them who they are
today."
Brazil and Turkey rounded out the top five happiest
nations, while Hungary, South Korea, Russia, Spain and Italy had the
fewest number of happy people.
Perhaps proving that money can't buy happiness,
residents of some of the world biggest economic powers, including the
United States, Canada and Britain, fell in the middle of the happiness
scale.
"There is a pattern that suggests that there are many
other factors beyond the economy that make people happy, so it does
provide one element but it is not the whole story," said Wright.
"Sometimes the greatest happiness is a cooked meal or a
roof over your head," he explained. "Relationships remain the No. 1
reason around the world where people say they have invested happiness
and maybe in those cultures family has a much greater degree of impact."
Regionally Latin America had the highest number of
happy people, followed by North America, Asia-Pacific and the Middle
East and Africa. Only 15 percent of Europeans said they were very happy.
On a more personal note married couples tended to be
happier than singles but men seemed to be as content as women. Education
and age also had an impact with more people under 35 saying they are
very happy than 25-49 year olds. Higher education also equated with
higher happiness.
Source :Reuters
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