Global Happiness Rankings

Syllabus: Important International institutions, agencies and fora

Context

  • The World Happiness Report 2025 ranks Finland first for the eighth time, while India stands at 118 with a score of 4.389.
  • Pakistan ranks 109, raising questions about the meaning and measurement of “happiness”.

Limits of Current Metrics

  • Rankings rely on the Gallup Cantril Ladder, where people rate their lives from 0–10.
  • Assessments combine six factors: 
    • GDP per capita, social support, life expectancy, freedom, generosity and corruption perception.
  • Perceptions are unstable, and lower expectations often lead to higher reported happiness.
  • Democracies like India experience reduced satisfaction due to rising aspirations and constant public scrutiny.
  • Nordic countries score high because of deep social trust, despite high taxation.

India’s Position Explained

  • India’s economic strength contrasts with its lower ranking due to trust deficits and shifting social connections.
  • Growing migration and digital dependence weaken real-world community networks, producing prosperity without proximity.
  • Report findings emphasise that social trust and belief in community kindness predict happiness more reliably than income.

Perception Bias and Democratic Penalty

  • Critics argue global indices reflect perception-based biases shaped by small expert groups.
  • Controlled or one-party systems appear more stable because dissent is muted.
  • India’s low score may reflect democratic self-critique, not genuine unhappiness.

Underlying Social Dynamics

  • India’s best ranking period was 2022, following welfare measures after COVID-19.
  • Low rankings historically coincide with corruption scandals or economic slowdowns.
  • Informal community trust in India remains strong but is often overlooked by western metrics.

Pathways to Improve Well-being

  • Strengthen social capital through community spaces and inter-generational engagement.
  • Improve institutional trust via transparent public services and simpler governance processes.
  • Integrate mental health into economic policy, recognising its productivity benefits.
  • India’s ongoing aspirations indicate not unhappiness but ambition for better living standards.

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