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Resilient

Ireland is the 15th happiest country in the world

The best examples of happiness maintenance after large external shocks were Ireland and Iceland, according to the report.

1127 Saint Patricks Day_90505760 Leah Farrell / RollingNews.ie Leah Farrell / RollingNews.ie / RollingNews.ie

IRELAND HAS RANKED 15th in the list of the happiest countries in the world.

The World Happiness Report 2017 – published by the United Nations today as part of the International Day of Happiness – ranked Ireland ahead of the United Kingdom (19) and just behind the United States (14).

Under the report heading ‘Social Foundations of Resilience’ the report remarked on how Ireland’s happiness levels have remained fairly constant, even during harsh economic times:

With respect to the post-2007 economic crisis, the best examples of happiness maintenance in the face of large external shocks were Ireland and especially Iceland.

World Happiness Report 2017 The colours relate to (l-to-r): Happiness explained by: GDP per capita; social support; health; freedom;generosity; perceptions of corruption. World Happiness Report 2017 World Happiness Report 2017

It is the fifth such report since the first was published in 2012.

“Since then we have come a long way. Happiness is increasingly considered the proper measure of social progress and the goal of public policy,” the report said.

Who topped the list?

Norway, meanwhile, surged from fourth place in last year’s UN assessment all the way to the top spot, according to the World Happiness Report 2017.

Other top countries on the list included Nordic neighbors Denmark and Iceland, as well as Switzerland.

Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg, who is facing a tough re-election battle in September, welcomed the report as “a nice validation on a Monday morning.

“For many years, Norway has been behind Denmark in this ranking.

“I’ve made a point of it in many dinner speeches in the Nordics. Now I must find something new!” she said in a message on Facebook in Norwegian.

But even if we top this statistic now we (must) continue to prioritize mental health care, to improve follow-up of children and young people because many are still struggling.

The report found that “all of the top four countries rank highly on all the main factors found to support happiness: caring, freedom, generosity, honesty, health, income and good governance.”

Rounding out the top 10 were Finland, in fifth place, The Netherlands (6), Canada (7), New Zealand (8) and Australia and Sweden tied for 9th.

All in the top 10 were affluent, developed nations, though the report said that money was not the only ingredient for happiness.

In fact, among the wealthier countries the differences in happiness levels had a lot to do with “differences in mental health, physical health and personal relationships: the biggest single source of misery is mental illness,” the report said.

Income differences matter more in poorer countries, but even their mental illness is a major source of misery.

Another major country, China, has made major economic strides in recent years. But its people are not happier than 25 years ago, the report found. China ranked 79th in the study of 155 countries.

The United States slipped to number 14 because of less social support and greater corruption – the very factors explaining why Nordic countries fare better on the happiness scale.

So what’s Norway at?

Norway Happy Nation Matthias Schrader / PA Images Matthias Schrader / PA Images / PA Images

Norway, the largest oil producer in western Europe, is a prosperous country – despite a recent drop in oil prices – with a very generous welfare state.

“We won the lottery,” Arne Larsen, a retired civil servant, told AFP in central Oslo.

“Oil is part of it, but you shouldn’t exaggerate its importance because life was good in Norway before too.

“I think it has more to do with fundamental societal factors: Norway is quite homogenous, it’s a country where the gap between the state and the people is not very big, and where there is a lot of trust,” he said.

Thea Sofie Rusten Grastveit, who works as an advisor for a humanitarian agency, echoed those thoughts.

Thirty years old and pregnant with her first child, she is getting ready to take a 16-month parental leave, which she will share 50-50 with her husband.

“One of the main reasons we can do all this is the oil money,” she acknowledged.

“We of course managed our resources well for the good of society, but we were also really lucky to have these resources,” she said.

With reporting from Gráinne Ní Aodha

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