World Happiness Report 2026

(worldhappiness.report)

54 points | by ChrisArchitect 2 hours ago

8 comments

  • weisnobody 12 minutes ago
    Well, someone once tried to get happiness classified as a psychiatric disorder:

    * https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC1376114/ (1992)

    The abstract: “ It is proposed that happiness be classified as a psychiatric disorder and be included in future editions of the major diagnostic manuals under the new name: major affective disorder, pleasant type. In a review of the relevant literature it is shown that happiness is statistically abnormal, consists of a discrete cluster of symptoms, is associated with a range of cognitive abnormalities, and probably reflects the abnormal functioning of the central nervous system. One possible objection to this proposal remains--that happiness is not negatively valued. However, this objection is dismissed as scientifically irrelevant.”

  • bigtones 1 hour ago
    FYI: This world happiness report is entirely based on asking just one obtuse question, which does not even have the word happiness in the actual question:

    Please imagine a ladder with steps numbered from 0 at the bottom to 10 at the top. The top of the ladder represents the best possible life for you and the bottom of the ladder represents the worst possible life for you. On which step of the ladder would you say you personally feel you stand at this time?

    • throw0101d 53 minutes ago
      The Howtown channel had a video on this last year, 'One weird metric picks the world's "happiest country"':

      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eg1--c2r8HE

      They link to their sources:

      * https://docs.google.com/document/d/1vFO-3Sq5-rorCWBIKwuR-Spk...

      Specifically the Cantril Self-Anchoring Striving Scale ("Cantril Ladder") is used:

      * https://www.sciotoanalysis.com/news/2024/2/9/what-is-cantril...

      * https://news.gallup.com/poll/122453/understanding-gallup-use...

      It's been around since 1965, so it's presumably been studied a lot and the pros and cons of it explored in the literature.

    • rapnie 35 minutes ago
      It looks to me that this refers to a 272 page PDF report [0] on the theme "Happiness and Social Media" and the Executive summary explains that it is about much more than that simple question.

      [0] https://files.worldhappiness.report/WHR26.pdf

    • FrustratedMonky 1 hour ago
      Its hard to frame a question across languages and cultures.

      The ladder metaphor isn't the worst.

      • semilin 1 hour ago
        It's especially hard to express "happiness" across languages. It's a word that is hard to define and generally has no perfect synonyms between languages. It ranges broadly from "present feeling of contentment" to "ultimate feeling of fulfillment in life," and it seems like the survey is aiming for the latter aspect. Therefore the ladder analogy is a decent way to communicate that.
      • jamilton 35 minutes ago
        An obvious issue with the metaphor that comes to mind is that if you consider yourself to have a pretty good life, to be overall happy and satisfied, but you think it's possible to have an objectively much better life, then you'd rank yourself relatively low. And vice versa, if you think your life sucks but it could be much worse you'd rank yourself relatively high.
        • lores 32 minutes ago
          Same problem as rating your pain on the pain scale: is 10 the worst pain I've experienced, or the worst I can imagine? Because I've got a... very vivid imagination. And still, that's the best we can do. I blame an imperfect universe.
        • FrustratedMonky 24 minutes ago
          But, that is still giving a happiness score.

          If the society/culture you are living within. Is well off, but swamped with cravings that it could be better. Then you are less happy.

          This study isn't trying to measure how 'materially well off you are', it is happiness. So if you are un-satisfied even with your big house, and un-happy, that still says something.

    • boringg 34 minutes ago
      Doesn't that almost imply the happiest countries in the world have a lack of imagination on what could be better? Or maybe they don't suffer from comparison (the thief of joy) as a culture.
      • bauerd 12 minutes ago
        >a lack of imagination on what could be better

        I'd argue it's likelier that people are more informed about their absolute position globally. Any screen gets you the mental image of the top of the ladder. So happy people would end up scoring themselves low, because there's a globalized vision of wealth nowadays.

        Besides there's a difference in life self-evaluation and experienced happiness, so the report really is a misnomer.

    • dismalaf 1 hour ago
      Canada here. Feels like we're barely hanging on to rung 5 or 6 and about to fall to the bottom.

      Quantifiable example: most recent jobs report we lost 100k+ full time jobs. Biggest job less since COVID. Or the fact our increase in GDP per capita is the (second?) worst in the OECD in the last 10 years. Worse than Japan, Italy, the UK and all the other laggards...

      • throw0101d 47 minutes ago
        > Canada here. Feels like we're barely hanging on to rung 5 or 6 and about to fall to the bottom.

        The Missing Middle podcast went into this in a recent episode, and it's age-dependent: older folks are happier (i.e., they have purchased homes), while younger folks are less happy (cost of living). We Canadians basically have age-dependent wealth-class nowadays.

        * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dizaUBC22o4&t=4m13s

        • dismalaf 17 minutes ago
          The fact boomers have it so good yet our ranking is dropping like a rock tells you just how bad it is for the working class, especially those who don't have government jobs...
      • canucker2016 51 minutes ago
        Here's the more important data point - Canada lost to the USA in three 2026 Winter Olympic Hockey finals. The whole country is hanging their collective heads in shame...
      • SECProto 52 minutes ago
        Also Canada, and I disagree pretty strongly with your post. Those two statistics have little bearing on happiness. Housing costs and healthcare access are much bigger concerns.
        • 9rx 39 minutes ago
          They are concerns, but not all that closely tied to happiness. Research shows time and time again that deep social connection is the key, if you will, to happiness.

          And today's Canadians aren't that great at being social: "In 1986, about one in two Canadians saw their friends on an average day. Now, only about one in five do." — https://www.cbc.ca/radio/nowornever/maintain-friendship-conn...

        • dismalaf 47 minutes ago
          > healthcare access

          What healthcare access? My family has had to go abroad for surgeries twice in the last 3 years because there's no access to healthcare here...

          And housing prices? My sister bought a mansion in Texas for less than a condo here.

          Arguably these two data points are even worse for Canada. Either way our ranking is dropping.

          • SECProto 38 minutes ago
            I'm saying that data (not anecdotes) on those would've been better justification for your ranking.

            That said, for most people, going abroad for surgery or to buy a home is not an option.

            • dismalaf 21 minutes ago
              Yes. GDP per capita is data and a well known proxy for quality of life.

              For example, declining productivity (which is what GDP per capita is) means a worse house price/income ratio, ie. worse affordability.

  • mjdiloreto 1 hour ago
    > On average, heavy social media use (more than five hours per day) is associated with lower wellbeing. Heavy users are significantly more likely to report higher stress and depressive symptoms, and believe they are worse off than their parents, compared with non- or moderate users.

    I like this framing of social media use in the same terms as drug use. There are significant risks to this activity that so many people are ambivalent toward. Depression is not a condition you want to have, and here's this activity that causes it (or at least significantly contributes to it). And yet, so many persist!

  • alstonite 1 hour ago
    It’s interesting to see a country’s internal rank of its own happiness against how I would rank them using my worldview.

    Israel for example seems like a place that would be fairly unhappy right now given world events, but they rank quite highly.

    Saudi Arabia also sticks out as unexpected. It seems in the media I hear about their government being quite oppressive (especially against women), so seeing them just above the US is surprising.

    • dannyphantom 1 hour ago
      IMO, everyone on Earth has to reconcile with their current circumstances and make the choice to go about life with a positive or negative disposition in spite of those circumstances.
    • card_zero 1 hour ago
      Perhaps all the Saudi men are very happy.
    • myth_drannon 1 hour ago
      It had a huge drop in positive emotions due to the war with Gaza in 2023. Actually, negative emotions were higher than positive which is sad and expected. But the index includes many metrics that don't change rapidly like GDP, life expactancy.. so any short conflict will not have outsized effect.
    • deadbabe 1 hour ago
      In Israel they use happiness as a rebellion. You try to kill them, you say what you want, but they don’t care, they stay happy. It fuels their enemy’s rage.
      • myth_drannon 52 minutes ago
        Yes, maybe. It's the old jewish way of dealing with being powerless in exile. You try to hit us, we smile and joke. It's not healthy.

        I think it's now more about gaining power as a nation and not being at the mercy of those who seek to destroy us.

    • whoknowsidont 1 hour ago
      [flagged]
  • stabbles 1 hour ago
    You would think that Finland's unemployment rate (10%+) would influence its ranking, but that's not the case at all.
    • PowerElectronix 57 minutes ago
      As it's selfreporting and it's more about expectations than actual happiness a finnish dude only needs to think that life is just incredible compared to what he sees at the other side of the border to selfreport a 10 in happiness
    • avgDev 1 hour ago
      Nordic countries have better safety nets.

      I haven't travelled there but I grew up in Poland and still visit. US feels very capitalistic to me. I feel the pace is slower in Poland. In US I feel the need to produce. Might be just me.

    • renewiltord 37 minutes ago
      Well, that's just inherent in the question which asks someone to imagine the best possible life vs. the worst possible life. In a society with lots of room to grow you aren't at the higher rungs. In a society with no progress possible you're at the top easily.
  • myth_drannon 58 minutes ago
    It's sad to see Canada drop so much, as much as Congo, Malawi and a bunch of other war torn places.
  • mvdtnz 47 minutes ago
    If you only followed my country's subreddit (New Zealand) you would believe we live in hell, it's the most miserable time in our nation's history and nobody has a future here. Of course this doesn't resonate at all with my own personal experience in my life. We rank 11th, unchanged year on year.
  • ranger_danger 1 hour ago
    Endless captcha loops for me whenever I click on a chapter.

    Not using any VPN or proxy, no CF DNS, nothing like that.