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IN PICS | World Happiness Report: India Ranked At 139 Out Of 149 Nations; Know The Most & Least Happy Countries In List
The UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network has released its World Happiness Report wherein India has been ranked 139 out of 149 countries in the survey. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)
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View In AppThe annual report ranks nations based on gross domestic product per person, healthy life expectancy and the opinions of residents. While India stood at 139, Pakistan was placed ahead on 105th spot, Bangladesh on 101st and China on 84th in the list. In 2019, India was ranked 140th. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)
Finland has been ranked as the happiest country in the world for the fourth consecutive year. It is followed by Demark, Switzerland, Iceland and The Netherlands respectively. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)
Norway is at 6th, followed by Sweden, Luxembourg, New Zealand and Austria in the order. “Our aim was two-fold, first to focus on the effects of COVID-19 on the structure and quality of people’s lives, and second to describe and evaluate how governments all over the world have dealt with the pandemic. In particular, we try to explain why some countries have done so much better than others, the statement elaborated. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)
In this report, Australia stands at the 11th position, Israel at 12th, Germany at 13th, Canada at 14th and Ireland at the 15th spot. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)
While Costa Rica is at 16, developed countries like United Kingdom and United States of America are stand 17 and 19. The Czech Republic is between both (18) and Belgium stands 20th. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)4
In terms of the opposite, i.e. the Unhappiest countries: India was followed by Burundi, Yemen, Tanzania, Haiti, Malawi, Lesotho, Rwanda. Zimbabwe and Afghanistan have been termed most unhappy, featuring at the absolute bottom of the list. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)
“There have been both in-person and telephone samples for India, with the in-person responses being lower than telephone responses, while significantly higher than in-person responses in 2019. Hence the reversal in 2020 of the longer-term slide in Indian life evaluations was not attributable to mode effects, the report informs about its survey in India. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)
“There is no doubt that the initial effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental ill-health symptoms were large, negative, and remarkably consistent across the data and studies discussed here. It is worth reiterating that these relate only to adults and solely to wealthy industrialised countries. These effects were worst in younger age groups and women, ethnic minorities, and those with pre-existing mental health problems, thus reinforcing many pre-existing mental health inequalities,” the report reveals about the impact of Coronavirus crisis. (Representative Photo: Getty Images)